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Amazon's Cloud Player: We Don't Need a License

halfEvilTech writes "Amazon has launched Cloud Drive and Cloud Player without securing streaming licenses from the music industry. But does it need to? Amazon says 'No.' The music industry? 'Yes.'" Do I need a license to stream MP3s from system RAM to the MP3 player? From my hard drive to RAM? From my file server to my machine?

539 comments

  1. As I and many others pointed out yesterday by elrous0 · · Score: 5, Informative

    My.MP3.com tried out a similar argument years ago, and it cost them a $53 million lawsuit (which bankrupted them). And in many ways this is even worse. MP3.com at least required you to prove you actually owned a disc before you could stream it. Amazon will let you upload ANYTHING (pirated, ripped, bought--makes no difference) and stream it.

    Now Amazon certainly has a better cadre of lawyers at its disposal than mp3.com did. And it has a lot more muscle with the industry (since it's once of the leading music retailers). But, even with that, this is still a stunningly ballsy move on their part. Hell, Sony sues people for even looking funny at their IP.

    And, yes, I hope Amazon wins out on this. If nothing else, it would set a nice precedent for Google and Apple to open up their upcoming music cloud services in a similar fashion.

    --
    SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    1. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      My.MP3.com tried out a similar argument years ago, and it cost them a $53 million lawsuit (which bankrupted them). And in many ways this is even worse. MP3.com at least required you to prove you actually owned a disc before you could stream it. Amazon will let you upload ANYTHING (pirated, ripped, bought--makes no difference) and stream it.

      That is exactly why the Amazon service looks like it might stand up legally. The user has to upload the content rather than it originating from a central source. This may seem like a subtle distinction but it changes the legal standpoint massively.

    2. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by halfEvilTech · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If I remember correctly, My.MP3.com also allowed users to share their collection as well which is was certain to doom it from that aspect in itself. Now as long as this is locked to your account only I would see no problem with this.

      I am rooting for Amazon obviously in this case and hopefully finally end the RIAA ability to double, triple dip their excessive licenses.

    3. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Fibe-Piper · · Score: 1

      Gotta agree with the parent post here. The "what's yours is yours, unless it is more mine", as an argument determined by corporate executives and armies of lawyers has got to go. Amazon should have no problem fighting off piss ant record companies at this point.

      --
      I went to battle M.C. Escher, but drew a blank.
    4. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      Something tells me that Sony and friends won't see it that way.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    5. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No. my.mp3.com would not let you upload anything. I'm am so fed up with every idiot with a keyboard thinking they know everything, and every billion $$$ company should follow their advice, as if they didn't have people smarter than them working full time on problems they've given hardly more than a passing glance.

    6. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by bigstrat2003 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I would hope so. Streaming one's own uploaded music is nothing more than a specialized form of data retrieval. It's asinine to claim that Amazon cannot allow this.

      --
      "16MB (fuck off, MiB fascists)" - The Mighty Buzzard
    7. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Cheviot · · Score: 5, Informative

      This is a different situation than my.mp3.com. In that case the website stored one copy of each piece of music, required the user to verify they owned it, then allowed you access to their stored copy. This was found to be actionable as they were allowing multiple people to download one master copy of a MP3, essentially repeatedly pirating that MP3.

      Amazon is establishing a separate cloud drive for each user. If you buy a MP3 they copy it to your personal drive for you. They also allow you to upload your music to that drive. There is a separate copy of each song stored on the cloud drive for each user, and the only MP3s Amazon copies to the drive are legally purchased. As the user can only download what they have uploaded or purchased, no piracy occurs, at least on Amazon's part. Users may be storing pirated music on their personal cloud drives, but these are private file storage areas and do not allow MP3s to be exchanged among users, thus the cloud drive does not facilitate piracy.

    8. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by One+Louder · · Score: 1

      I don't think MyMP3.com allowed sharing, however, MP3Tunes (also created by Michael Robertson) does, and they're being sued by EMI over it.

      Apparently the distinction doesn't matter to the record companies - they sued in both scenarios.

    9. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If this were decided by what was just, or even by what was the law, I don't see how Amazon could lose.

      Unfortunately, more important than being in the right these days is having good lawyers. The MAFIAA lawyers have practically managed to convince the courts that any use of something they hold the copyright to that doesn't follow their own arbitrary rules is a copyright violation, even if they don't have the right to set those rules in the first place.

      Amazon is screwed.

    10. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      Amazon may well have a very well-thought-out plan here (I never claimed otherwise). I guess we'll see.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    11. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by MBGMorden · · Score: 5, Insightful

      How they see it in non-important in the end though. They've already made their position clear on the matter. What matters is whether or not they can convince a court that they are being illegally harmed. That's often a whole different reality than how a party wants to "see" an issue.

      --
      "People who think they know everything are very annoying to those of us who do."-Mark Twain
    12. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by DJRumpy · · Score: 1

      I'm of two minds on this one. When you purchase a CD, you do get license to play that CD, fair use, etc. In this case, Amazon is acting as an intermediary for the end user, and providing the infrastructure for that functionality, but Amazon themselves do not have license for these.

      I somehow think Amazon is going to pull back a bloody stump on this one. There are differences between taking your bought and paid for music collection and putting on a file server you own, and streaming your own music to your devices. It's a whole different ballgame when a for-profit company takes music it doesn't own, stores it, and streams it out, even if you are the one who is asking them to do so.

      Seems to me (IANAL), that this is very shaky ground, especially if they are not validating that the licenses for these are valid to begin with (verifying the end users bought the music themselves).

    13. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The salient difference is that mp3.com was the *source* of the music files. You proved that you owned the disc, but they didn't maintain a separate copy for each user. With the Amazon cloud the user is the source of the music files. The user is simply space-shifting their existing media. Conceptually, Amazon has a separate copy of each file. I'm sure the implementation de-duplicates for storage efficiency, but the interface is that you have a music folder in the cloud.

      The Amazon cloud here is much less like mp3.com was, and much more like Dropbox is. In fact, it is little more than a tiny script wrapper around S3. Unless of course the recording industry would like to challenge our right to back up our files to the cloud (and I'm sure they would).

    14. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by mclearn · · Score: 5, Informative

      Actually, TFA states that if you purchase an MP3 from Amazon, it is automatically synced to their service. But other content will have to be uploaded, yes.

    15. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by TheDarkMaster · · Score: 1

      Is not a cadre of lawyers. Is a squad of ex-SEALs with rocket launchers.

      --
      Religion: The greatest weapon of mass destruction of all time
    16. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now if they would let me stream videos so I can have streaming porn on my Android phone, I'll be happy.

    17. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      I would hope so. Streaming one's own uploaded music is nothing more than a specialized form of data retrieval. It's asinine to claim that Amazon cannot allow this.

      "Asinine" is the record labels' established business plan AND profit model, you understand.

      In fact, "Asinine" might actually be a record label.

    18. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by chaboud · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You need to read up on the DMCA Safe Harbor provisions. ISPs and hosting providers are *not* responsible for the content pushed to them by users. Besides, it's a private, per-user setup.

      What about the content that you put on Sky Drive? In GMail? in regular email? On your ftp server at your hosting provider?

      It is not the responsibility of ISPs to audit and police every bit that passes over their equipment. Simple common sense and the law both agree with me (a rare gem in itself).

    19. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Tx · · Score: 1

      I don't think it's that ballsy, as Amazon definitely has a case, but it's definitely an argument that needs to be had, so props to them for taking it on. As the summary points out, Amazon aren't providing the music, they're providing you with the means to stream your music to yourself. You can already do that in countless ways, and while I'm sure the music industry would like to charge you for a license for each and every one of those means, that doesn't mean they legally can. I don't know the My.MP3 history, but it sounds from the wikipedia link you posted like that was about streaming to everybody, not just to yourself, so doesn't sound directly comparable.

      --
      Oh no... it's the future.
    20. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by 19thNervousBreakdown · · Score: 1

      If you've ever worked on a large project for a billion $$$ company your opinion of their competence wouldn't be so high. Things may be meticulously handled because the boss said so and allocated appropriate resources, they may appear to be meticulously handled because the boss said so but the employee thinks they can get away with slacking and it's not important anyway, or they may be done they way they are because the boss is in a pique and decreed it, and even though everybody involved thinks it's fucking crazy, nobody wants to argue with Jeff Bezos when he's in that kind of a mood, and according to CEO-think changing your mind is showing weakness.

      Note: Jeff Bezos is just an example, I don't actually know if he's one of those CEOs (most are though).

      --
      <xml><I><am><so><damn>Web 2.0</damn></so></am></I></xml>
    21. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Homburg · · Score: 3, Interesting

      It's a whole different ballgame when a for-profit company takes music it doesn't own, stores it, and streams it out, even if you are the one who is asking them to do so.

      I don't think it is. Generally, if it's legal for you to do something, it's legal for you to employ someone to do it on your behalf. I would be surprised if it would be illegal for me to, say, pay someone to come round to my house and rip my CDs for me. Amazon's system seems to be broadly analogous.

    22. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 2

      The issue at stake here may be whether or not Amazon has the license to stream audio that has been purchased from their store. The article is really light on details, but, if Amazon's the digital distributor of that music, depending on Amazon's licensing terms with the various studios which may strictly prohibit streaming of MP3 content by Amazon.

      I'm surprised their lawyer team didn't work things out with the various studios, the RIAA, and the mole people before going live with this thing.

      --
      Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
    23. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by hedwards · · Score: 1

      There is no difference here, ultimately the end users would be responsible for any infringement, but in this case there would be no infringement involved as there is no distribution. As long as Amazon has something in place to prevent these accounts being used for distribution they should be legally in the clear.

      The RIAA of course doesn't agree with that, but those are the same people that make money by selling people several copies of the same work because their DRM prevents people from making full use of their fair use rights.

    24. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      which is all very well, but if I were Amazon, would I **actually** store 100,000 separate copies of The Lion Sleeps Tonight.mp3 on various points throughout a cloud drive network, or would I just use symlinks?

    25. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by badran · · Score: 1

      They are basically providing you with a VPS home file server which is stored on their end.

    26. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by mlts · · Score: 1

      This.

      Yes, Amazon has far better legal power than mp3.com did, but the record labels have been at this stuff for years and have bought themselves sympathetic ears (and a goodly number of laws) worldwide.

      For a car analogy, it would be like a semi rig going against a train at a railroad crossing, as opposed to mp3.com's PT Cruiser. Either way, the fate will be the same in the end.

      Time will tell; I hope Amazon succeeds in this effort because Amazon is just doing active storage for one person, just like box.net. The only difference is that it is for music.

    27. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by bedroll · · Score: 1

      I think a key difference is that my.mp3.com required that you prove ownership of the CD, but they did not use your file for streaming.

      Also important is the ruling allowing for remote storage of DVR content in the CNN v CSC Holdings case. So there's precedent both ways here.

    28. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by TheRaven64 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      There are differences between taking your bought and paid for music collection and putting on a file server you own, and streaming your own music to your devices

      Where does the difference start?

      1. I rip my CDs and play them, is this legal?
      2. I stream the ripped music from my laptop to my hifi, is this legal?
      3. I store it on a file server on my local network and stream it to whichever computer / device I want to use, is this legal?
      4. I move the file server into a colo and stream it from there, is this legal?
      5. I replace the dedicated server with a VM on someone else's system, is this legal?
      6. I replace the dedicated VM with an account on someone else's system, is this legal?

      None of these steps look like they would be illegal in any jurisdiction where format shifting is allowed.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    29. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by doconnor · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I suspect that, behind the scenes, if a two users upload identical files Amazon will only store one copy.

    30. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by TheoMurpse · · Score: 1

      I wrote a scholarly article on this topic (copyright issues with audio cloud storage) a couple years ago, and My.MP3.com was something I discussed. My.MP3.com had one copy of a music file that it stored on its servers, and that copy was shared between all users who "proved" they owned the CD. In my paper, I concluded that this was the real damning thing about their service: The users did not rip their music; My.MP3.com ripped its music and then shared it with people who allegedly owned the CD already. While ethically equivalent in my opinion, this is legally distinct from what Amazon is offering (with Amazon, you're basically using a giant iPod that uses the Internet instead of wired earbuds).

      There are other issues I addressed in my paper about this service (ultimately I concluded that cloud-based audio streaming could be legal if the service was structured a certain way), but that is beyond the scope of a response to your post.

    31. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Notice every one of your sentences starts with 'I' except for all the bits where Amazon is involved which you seemed to have excluded. I doubt the courts will be so willing to ignore that Amazon IS in the picture.

      There are two parties involved.

    32. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Dishevel · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It is legal for me to "beat my meat".
      I do not think it is legal in most places around me to hire someone to do it for me. :)

      Just having fun is all.

      --
      Why is it so hard to only have politicians for a few years, then have them go away?
    33. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by FictionPimp · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Are they going to go after dropbox, jungledisk, or any other generic cloud storage people have been using to do this well before amazon thought about it?

    34. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Did mp3.com lose, or did they just run out of money?

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    35. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by hippo · · Score: 1

      Lets hope the RIAA lawyers don't realize that Amazon will be de-duping this data.

    36. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by rbollinger · · Score: 1

      The decision for this case was written in 2000, and I believe that the concept of digital media has significantly changed since then. One of the primary points made by the Judge was that making digital copies of music purchased on CD was not covered by fair use, and that the Record Company maintains the right to licence digital copies of their work. Fast-forwarding to 2011, most users of the service would be uploading digital copies of their music instead of 'copying' from CD. As long as the user has rights to a digital copy that can be transfered to several devices (e.g. DRM free digital copies), then I think the service should be legitimate. Amazon could probably protect itself with some terms of service language making that a condition of use.

      The Legal Decision:
      http://www.law.uh.edu/faculty/cjoyce/copyright/release10/UGM.html

    37. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Yvanhoe · · Score: 1

      On these issues, there are no right and wrongs, there are just two teams of lawyers and lobbyists trying to disrupt each other's reality distortion bubble.

      As the summary mentions, music transfers occur all the time. If the music industry want to tax or license transfers, let's define precisely in technical term what constitutes a transfer, and let's work around that.

      --
      The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
    38. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by unjedai · · Score: 1

      Amazon will let you upload ANYTHING (pirated, ripped, bought--makes no difference) and stream it.

      So they'll let me upload ANYTHING and then later download it? How dare they!!!

    39. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by gman003 · · Score: 1

      Why? Disk storage is cheaper than the processing power it would take to compare each new upload to the several billion files already uploaded. Something as simple as changing the ID3 tags from "Nobuo Uematsu" to "Uematsu Nobuo" would make the files different enough to require two copies. Multiply that by the millions of songs people will upload. Add in the fact that two people ripping the same audio CD (even with the same encoder and same settings) may not end up with identical files...

    40. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by caseih · · Score: 5, Insightful

      So... it's legal until Amazon starts running a dedup algorithm on their disks. Crazy.

    41. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by bryansj · · Score: 2

      Probably symlinks for the Amazon purchased music only. If 100,000 users uploaded a file with the same name then it would be 100,000 individual copies of the same file.

    42. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by geekoid · · Score: 1

      which is insane. If it's the same data, why should we need to make many copies? It's very wasteful.

      Think how cheap it would be if they just had 1 copy of all music and then gave access to people after they prove they bought the track? I mean, what would that be? 10 TB of data, maybe? now it's 5Gigs per person, min.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    43. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by cforciea · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You would store 100,000 different copies because storage is cheap, and you might not be able to get away with feeding me back Bubba's tiny bitrate rip of the song's chorus played over and over when I ask for the version I uploaded. Excepting, of course, copies that match checksum, file size, and meta data with the version sold by Amazon, maybe (even that sounds like a lot of work when storage is so cheap).

    44. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right, but they won't make this part of Cloud Drive explicitly, to avoid legal issues. Instead way down at some internal storage layer beneath the service, they'll implement this as file-level or block-level storage de-duplication.

    45. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Cheviot · · Score: 1

      I would too, if not for the earlier my.mp3.com case. Since that happened they'd be crazy to do as you suggest. Surely their lawyers would have pointed this out to Amazon.

    46. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Fujisawa+Sensei · · Score: 1

      The music cartel would prefer that you have to buy a separate license for each kind of use.

      Actually they prefer a metered pay per play model, but they haven't gotten that one, yet.

      --
      If someone is passing you on the right, you are an asshole for driving in the wrong lane.
    47. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by 0100010001010011 · · Score: 1

      Unless they use a sane filesystem like ZFS.

    48. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by dr2chase · · Score: 1

      If it gets to the point that the RIAA lawyers are arguing against the use of de-duplicating storage systems, I think they've probably lost.

    49. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by somersault · · Score: 1

      What about RedTube, PornTube and all that kind of thing? Android has Flash, so I'm sure they'd work.

      --
      which is totally what she said
    50. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by afidel · · Score: 1

      No, it doesn't. Amazon's just offering a more convenient interface to their cloud storage service. The fact that they are making place shifting easier doesn't make it any less legal.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    51. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Threni · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure I agree. You'd need to do a MD5 checksum on the file, once, as it's uploaded (this is not needed in the case of stuff bought from Amazon as they'll only need to calculate the checksum once ever). You'd need to compare that checksum against all the other checksums, once, then you're done. A CD which sells millions of copies is going to be stored millions of times. That's got to be more expensive to handle (ie multiple backups in different locations, all of which must be able to go online to recover a failed location if the user is to get a "no downtime" experience. All of that is cheaper than a MD5 hash calculation and a database lookup?

    52. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      What matters is whether or not they can convince a court that they are being illegally harmed.

      That shouldn't be too hard, since the judge that will hear the case will probably be a former RIAA lawyer.

    53. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by clang_jangle · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If they weren't utter morons they'd realize that this could be a golden opportunity for the mafiAA.
      Step 1: get everyone to upload all their content to "the cloud"
      Step 2: obtain warrants
      Step 3: scan everyone's data in search of "IP infringement"
      Step 4: sue everyone for a gazillion dollars
      Step 5: profit!
      I know, I missed the "???" step. Oh well...

      --
      Caveat Utilitor
    54. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Console modders have been fined and/or imprisoned for this sort of thing.

    55. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 2

      I, for one, do not want to be the expert witness who has to parse out the differences between storing multiple copies, symlinks, hardlinks, file-level deduplication, block-level deduplication, whatever jiggery-pokery Amazon's EBS volumes use, whatever different jiggery-pokery supports objects and buckets on S3, to a layman jury and a judge who may or may not have gone to lawyer school back when glass ttys were pretty cool stuff...

      It may well be even worse because, since copyright law was written more or less entirely without any reference to contemporary storage, the decision might well hinge on some combination of how the backend works and what abstraction or abstractions are used to present the data to the user.

    56. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Absolutely not; the principals behind the service are no different than other AWS virtualization offerings technically.

    57. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by afidel · · Score: 1

      Oh, I'm sure they did and I'm sure the RIAA wanted their first born and all potential profits from all music Amazon ever sells, which is why they did a simple end run around them.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    58. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by BronsCon · · Score: 1

      I replace the dedicated VM with an account on someone else's system, is this legal?

      I'm pretty sure "someone else" is Amazon. Whether all of the steps are followed or the user opts to truncate them into something like

      I rip my CDs and ... store it ... on my ... account on someone else's system ... and ... stream the ripped music from my ... account on someone else's system ... to whichever computer / device I want to use.

      the answer to "Is it legal?" doesn't change. We know this much; what we don't know (though it should be a glaringly obvious "YES!" on all counts) is "Is it legal?".

      --
      APK quotes people (including myself) without context and should not be trusted. Just thought you should know.
    59. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      They actually lost the case. They settled during the damages phase.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    60. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by gstoddart · · Score: 4, Informative

      You would store 100,000 different copies because storage is cheap, and you might not be able to get away with feeding me back Bubba's tiny bitrate rip of the song's chorus played over and over when I ask for the version I uploaded. Excepting, of course, copies that match checksum, file size, and meta data with the version sold by Amazon, maybe (even that sounds like a lot of work when storage is so cheap).

      Well, the big storage vendors already have technology to do this. It's called deduplication.

      Basically, the storage arrays do this themselves. They find files which are identical to other files, and then collapse them so that there is only one actual copy, but it looks to the individual users like they have their own copy. Unless someone edits the file, the same copy is shared across everybody.

      In this case, it certainly wouldn't give you a different file at a different bit rate. It would only collapse files that are identical. So, you and Bubba wouldn't share the same copy of the file.

      So, presumably, if you and I both rip files to MP3, there might be some differences. If you and I download it from Amazon, that is going to be a good candidate to remove duplicates.

      As far as I know, that process happens in the background once you set it up, and it happens at the storage level of things. This is in use all over the place, and it certainly wouldn't be purely based off the file name.

      --
      Lost at C:>. Found at C.
    61. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Missing.Matter · · Score: 1

      What's the difference between a user buying music from amazon and uploading it to his own server to stream from anywhere, and Amazon uploading it to their server automatically for just that user to stream. Is listening to your own music over the internet only legal when it's difficult to set up?

    62. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by schwinn8 · · Score: 0

      "I moved the file server into a colo [aka Amazon S3 or "Cloud Drive"] and stream it from there, is this legal?"

      After all, the user has to do this themselves... except for the purchased tracks. And in that latter scenario, I am sure Amazon simply "links" to the existing MP3 on their server... I expect they don't create a "new copy" of it for the user. So, they aren't actually MOVING the file anywhere. (That's why they give you that storage space for free... since it costs them nothing to do it.) So, if you want to get techincal about this, then the RIAA still loses the argument there, too.

      The only other argument that could be made is that Amazon has the right to allow DOWNLOADs of the MP3, and not streams. But the only difference there (technically) is that a stream is a "slow download" with "no saving rights". Therefore, a download is more encompassing, and if you do it slowly and play it while you're downloading, why is that suddenly different? Technically, it isn't. But I'm sure this level of logic is lost on the legal system.

    63. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by camperdave · · Score: 1

      As long as Amazon has something in place to prevent these accounts being used for distribution they should be legally in the clear.

      How is Amazon going to prevent someone from sharing out their username and password?

      --
      When our name is on the back of your car, we're behind you all the way!
    64. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by delinear · · Score: 3, Interesting

      But it's only illegal in that one case because there is a specific law in place that overrides your legal right. That means there would need to be an existing law that says Amazon can't act as paid storage for your own legally purchased content - I'd be surprised if such a law existed.

    65. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by jhoegl · · Score: 1

      If they weren't utter morons they'd realize that this could be a golden opportunity for the mafiAA. Step 1: get everyone to upload all their content to "the cloud" Step 2: obtain warrants Step 3: scan everyone's data in search of "IP infringement" Step 4: sue everyone for a gazillion dollars Step 5: profit! I know, I missed the "???" step. Oh well...

      TL;DP: Too long, didn't profit.

    66. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Lumpy · · Score: 1

      Sony sues people for even looking funny at their IP.

      That's wierd... I have been sticking my tongue at , making faces toward , and otherwise disrespecting 64.37.182.61 for weeks now and they have not even made a peep...

      Maybe they are getting soft...

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    67. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by fermion · · Score: 2
      From my understanding, new content is downloaded to the users local machine and the Cloud player, creating two distinct copies that are played from two distinct locations for a single purchase. The streaming kind of looks like Apple iTunes home sharing, so Amazon may have a leg to stand on there.

      Amazon is clearly engaging in a staring contest with the music labels, just as it did with publishers. Amazon, I think, is counting on the fact they are the only real alternative to iTunes, and if the labels do sue them in oblivion for sharing music in this way, then Amazon will simply be forced to stop selling digita music. Such an event will mean that music labels will be in much worse position when negotiating terms with Apple.

      Music labels are quickly causing a situation where kids are used to either getting music streams on demand to their players, or downloading free copies of the latest hits. Unlike previous generation, kids are not getting acclimated to paying for albums of even singles. Apple and Amazon are doing a great service to the music labels by creating a profitable market for recorded music.

      One hundred years ago., the recorded music industry all but destroyed the printed sheet music industry. If the music labels are not careful, on demand digital music may destroy the music labels within the next generation.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    68. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is a different situation than my.mp3.com. In that case the website stored one copy of each piece of music, required the user to verify they owned it, then allowed you access to their stored copy. This was found to be actionable as they were allowing multiple people to download one master copy of a MP3, essentially repeatedly pirating that MP3.

      So in this context, "pirating" can only mean "copying", right?

    69. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by RemyBR · · Score: 1

      >>Amazon is establishing a separate cloud drive for each user

      Then there's this funny thing called data deduplication, that I'm sure amazon is using on their storage systems. This could mean that if you and I upload the same MP3 file to our individual personal cloud drives, they'll end up being physically stored as a single set of 0's and 1's at the lowest level. Where do you draw the line on this?

    70. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by kill-1 · · Score: 1

      You could even calculate a hash before uploading, and skip the upload if the file is already somewhere in the cloud.

    71. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 2

      How they see it in non-important in the end though. They've already made their position clear on the matter. What matters is whether or not they can convince a court that they are being illegally harmed. That's often a whole different reality than how a party wants to "see" an issue.

      I'm reminded of when the RIAA's web site claimed that it was illegal to rip a CD to MP3s or make a copy to keep in your car. Granted - their president also went around saying that he believed each player should also have its own copy of any given CD.

    72. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by david.given · · Score: 2, Interesting

      "Asinine" is the record labels' established business plan AND profit model, you understand.

      In fact, "Asinine" might actually be a record label.

      It is. http://www.emusic.com/label/Asinine-Records-CD-Baby-MP3-Download/402721.html

      (Admittedly, it's more of a 'label' than a label, having released one album and apparently being a self-publishing pseudonym, but still...)

    73. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by alen · · Score: 1

      i bet they use Single Instance Storage from EMC or someone else. its been around for backups since 2006 or so and there are products on the market that will dedupe live data. technically it's separate files but in the end the system deletes all the common data except for one copy

    74. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Tolkien · · Score: 1
    75. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by bemymonkey · · Score: 1

      If Google and Apple are smart, they'll offer to bankroll a couple of extra lawyers for Amazon. These services are a huge additional value... precedent here we come :)

    76. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by stiller · · Score: 1

      Ha! That's exactly what I was thinking. Do they than still constitute separate files?

    77. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by delinear · · Score: 1

      Even so, considering that's what tripped up MP3.com (serving copies of the same file to multiple users, even though the file itself might be bit for bit identical to the CD rip of their purchased CD), Amazon would be insane to follow the same model just to save the tiny amount per file in storage costs.

    78. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Dhalka226 · · Score: 1

      no piracy occurs, at least on Amazon's part. Users may be storing pirated music on their personal cloud drives, but these are private file storage areas and do not allow MP3s to be exchanged among users, thus the cloud drive does not facilitate piracy.

      I do tend to agree with you, and I certainly hope you (and Amazon) are correct.

      One thing to point out though: The user is probably committing copyright infringement by uploading their music collection. Where they once had one copy of a song, they now have two--which can both rather easily be used at the same time. Does this service facilitate copyright infringement by making it essentially the default use case? I don't know. I don't think so, I call one copy at a given time a backup. Then again, I thought Napster's defense was pretty solid so I am obviously not a good source to analyze that.

      Ultimately, whether you and they are right or wrong, I think a lawsuit is inevitable and the only way to find out.

    79. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by delinear · · Score: 1

      Amazon aren't a single mom or an elderly grandparent, though. They have their own deep pockets and pack of rabid lawyers. They're also a major distribution channel for the very labels that are complaining. This definitely won't be the usual **AA steamroller campaign, whichever way it falls (and as far as I can see, it has to go Amazon's way if cloud based content delivery has any kind of future).

    80. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Amazon can run dedup all they want. As long as the user file storage areas are logically separate it should be legal. The hard links on the back end NAS are a physical artifact of the storage array and an implementation detail. If I purchase a "smart" NAS and start coping files to it and it stores all the identical files in the same disk blocks but leaves the structure and access permissions as I intend do I care?

    81. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Torvac · · Score: 1

      in fact amazon can just threaten to not sell their cds anymore. why would they try and sue them ?

    82. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So... it's legal until Amazon starts running a dedup algorithm on their disks. Crazy.

      How do the courts define a "copy"?

    83. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by sodul · · Score: 1

      That's the point, there will not be billions and billions of files if implemented right. Google does it with Gmail.

      Storage is cheap ... to an extent. This is true for small scale systems, for large scale things such as these, hardware costs become higher than the development cost. The id3 tags is a non issue, that's just metadata. They will not treat the music files as dumb binaries but probably as objects an audio stream and the metada specific tot he user. Even without using md5, services like Shazam have proven that it is cheap to compare songs. I would not be surprised that they end up aggregating audio streams that are 99% similar to save on storage.

    84. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by zegota · · Score: 1

      Reasonable accommodations can be made. If a username/password is being used 50 times a day from 50 different IPs, you can reasonably assume something fishy is going in.

    85. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Asinine is the name of my Metallica cover band.

      (paulandstorm.com if you don't get the reference)

    86. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Hatta · · Score: 1

      There is a separate copy of each song stored on the cloud drive for each user

      How do you know it's not just a hard link, or that it isn't otherwise abstracted on the back end? Why should it matter from a legal perspective?

      The law needs to come to terms with the fact that bits are fungible. There is no meaningful difference between one string of bits that's been accessed 1000 times and 1000 copies of the same string of bits that have been accessed one time each.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    87. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You suspect this cause you're a hungry troll, illiterate or generally clueless?

      "...[users receive] 5GB of online storage to use for whatever they please."

      Amazon's position is that, at its core, this isn't anything more than a shared hosting setup.

      If a thousand users want to fill up their allocated space with the same file it makes no difference to Amazon. There is nothing to suggest they have any reason to check or care.

    88. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by delinear · · Score: 1

      Good point, and of course, from RIAA's perspective it's practically impossible to determine whether the file someone uploads is a digital copy from elsewhere or a CD rip (having the distinction in the first place is stupid, it's all just data, but it was 2000 I guess, it's expecting a bit much that a judge would understand such concepts...)

    89. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      If you are British the answer to each of those questions is a simple No.

      When Labour were reviewing copyright it was suggested they ought to make ripping CDs legal. They declined to.

    90. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by _0xd0ad · · Score: 2

      Streaming one's own uploaded music is nothing more than a specialized form of data retrieval.

      One's own music? That would be music that you yourself performed and recorded. Otherwise, you don't "own" the music. You own nothing but a license to play it under the terms that its real owner dictates, and they're in the business of making you pay to listen to their music. And they're obviously not opposed to the idea of making you pay more than once to listen to the same song.

      And yes, I agree that it's completely absurd. They shouldn't be allowed to tell you where you can keep a copy of their music or when or how you can listen to it.

    91. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Cederic · · Score: 1

      High speed high volume high availability storage isn't cheap.

      Sure, 5GB isn't a lot and is cheap these days. Shit, 5 TB isn't expensive.

      5TB is 1000 users. What if they have a million users?

      Amazon would be insane to turn off the device level de-duplication mechanisms that allow them to hold a million different references to the same underlying file because all one million users happened to upload their identical copy of the Radiohead album they bought in mp3 format.

      The file system will report a million albums. The underlying storage use will be one album (and a million references).

    92. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by dnahelicase · · Score: 1

      I'm of two minds on this one. When you purchase a CD, you do get license to play that CD, fair use, etc. In this case, Amazon is acting as an intermediary for the end user, and providing the infrastructure for that functionality, but Amazon themselves do not have license for these.

      Well, Amazon doesn't have a license to use your information in the Cloud Drive, so they don't need a license.

      If you read the TOS for the Cloud Drive, it doesn't say that there are going to be employees streaming your music collection, or that they are going to make your music collection available to other people.

      I don't understand why this is an issue at all. I use pogoplug to do the same thing for my home collection, but have, in the past, used Mozy, Carbonite, and direct streaming through Windows Media Player (after seeing those awful commercials about who came up with the idea for Windows 7). All of those services use third party infrastructure. Some are stored locally at my house, some through a service provider. Everything that isn't a VPN or a direct IP is going to go through someone else in order to get you to your content.

      Right now I am able to stream my entire music collection on my phone through my Pogoplug, and used to do it through Mozy's experimental Decho service.

      Why would they need rights to my stuff, and how would they even get the rights for works that aren't part of the RIAA umbrella?

    93. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Their position never changes: "whatever you do with music, we want money for it."
      They'd charge you for each time you played a song, if they could get away with it.

    94. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Kjella · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You could even calculate a hash before uploading, and skip the upload if the file is already somewhere in the cloud.

      No, this is exactly what you can't do and what killed mp3.com. As pointless as it sounds to a computer scientist, it matters where the bits came from. They must come from YOUR copy, not someone else's copy and not some central master copy.

      For example, I could have a hacked client that only passes you the correct checksum values, and suddenly you give me access to lots of files I don't have. How did that happen? Oh, Amazon committed copyright infringement. In fact, no matter what it's copyright infringement because they rely on borrowing your fair use rights. Since your fair use rights don't involve taking a copy of someone else's CD, neither do theirs.

      The only way Amazon is safe is to let you access exactly what you uploaded, no more and no less. They can probably get by with deduplication as long as a skilled expert witness explains that everyone still have to upload their own copy and that it's simply a storage optimization. Anything else just crosses the border from ballsy to insane.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    95. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In fact, "Asinine" might actually be a record label.

      Actually, it is.

      http://www.myspace.com/asininerecords

    96. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, Asinine is the name of my Rick Springfield cover band.

    97. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by John.P.Jones · · Score: 1

      Suppose that Amazon is computing checksums to determine if two users are storing the same file and if so only storing a single copy with a pointer. This could potentially save them storage especially if they do it at smaller granularity than the whole file (to ignore differences in headers etc). Would this implementation detail, invisible to the end user change the legality of the system as a whole?

    98. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by tsm_sf · · Score: 1

      Amazon is acting as an intermediary for the end user, and providing the infrastructure for that functionality, but Amazon themselves do not have license for these.

      How is this different from an iPod?

      --
      Literalism isn't a form of humor, it's you being irritating.
    99. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by RicktheBrick · · Score: 1

      I guess this means that millions of people will upload the same song to Amazon. The worst part is that Amazon had that same song even before anyone uploaded it. Than the same people are going to download a song several times that they already have but to different devices. I was watching TED yesterday and a speaker said that it takes the energy of a lump of coal to download a million bytes of data. So I guess we need to transfer trillions of bytes of data between devices that could have been done locally. They are going to do the same thing with movies. We are being forced to download movies because MPAA will not allow us to transfer them to other devices legally. All this to ensure that someone will not listen to or watch something they have not paid for. I moved a cd of music to a sd card and placed that card in another computer. The computer informed me that I did not have the license to listen to that music. When the computer tried to download a license it failed and I did not want to put that much effort into trying to listen to a song that I had already purchased. Lets destroy the environment rather than lose a couple of sales.

    100. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You own the iPod hardware. You do not own Amazon's cloud storage.

    101. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd bet my next paycheck (I'm looking for a job) that Google has cloud music in the works. Not only does this garner users to it's services, the data mining opportunities are invaluable. Hosting an individual's documents, spreadsheets, emails, chats, contacts, calendar, search queries, and music collection provides a fairly panoramic view of anyone. In fact, I heard a lecturer from Google, at the University of Washington, state that Google exercises caution in actually revealing how much they know.

      I'm quite sure Google knows when I go to the bathroom.

    102. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      AUDIOGALAXY

      I'm streaming my music to my phone right now from my PC.

      Why do I need Amazon again?

    103. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by LordStormes · · Score: 1

      Until you hand that Amazon password out to 200,000 of your closest friends on IRC. Everybody uploads their content to the one "shared" account, takes what they want, and voila. Amazon is now hosting an all-you-can-pirate buffet.

    104. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by _0xd0ad · · Score: 1

      But MP3.com hadn't sold that file to the user. Their copy isn't the same as your copy. You can play your copy, not their copy.

      According to our inane copyright laws, even if you and your friend have the exact same CD, he can't rip it and give you the MP3s. Even if they're bit-for-bit identical to what you'd get if you ripped the CD yourself. That was basically what MP3.com was doing - giving you access to their copy of the song. You're not allowed to do that. It has to be your copy of the song.

      Amazon sold the song, which meant they gave you access to the MP3 file on their server, which they still possess - so everyone who bought it gets access to the exact copy they originally purchased. That should be perfectly kosher.

    105. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by HermMunster · · Score: 1

      This is not a new type of service. Amazon.com allows for streaming of music you place up there. Canonical sells music through their UbuntuOne music store and that's stored in the cloud. You can then access those music files from the web in a similar manner to Amazon.com.

      And, as far as the other loosing bankrupt entity goes, maybe they shouldn't have been forced to pay $53 million and been bankrupted. Maybe the courts would have seen it differently on appeal and the only reason they didn't was due to a lack of funds. Amazon.com probably has enough to fight and appeal.

      But what right does the music cartel have to tell Amazon that they can't allow us to have access to our own files from a service we signed up for. Technically, it is up to the music cartel to prove that the music is there in violation of copyright laws. Good luck with that as the music is privately stored and only accessible to someone with the email address and password of the service.

      --
      You can lead a man with reason but you can't make him think.
    106. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Assmasher · · Score: 1

      Next thing you know they'll decide to sue Crucial for letting me buffer audio playback from my SuperDrive in memory without a license from Sony...

      --
      Loading...
    107. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Cheviot · · Score: 1

      And a completely trackable one. Amazon doesn't give these accounts to just anyone. You have to create an account with them and, it appears, have purchased something from them. They have the offender's name, address and payment information.

      I don't imagine they'd hesitate to turn you in to protect their service.

    108. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Looking funny at Sony's IP is Sony's IP!

    109. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by wvmarle · · Score: 1

      You know the difference already.The difference is Amazon doing it or the user doing it. The first is Amazon's responsibility, the second is the user's responsibility. And yes that's a big difference.

    110. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Michael Robertson's mp3.com actually had a more radical approach. Rather than uploading your own mp3 tracks, it provided an app that would read the signature of audio CDs in an optical drive connected to the computer on which it was run, identify the album title, and grant access to the mp3 tracks already residing on mp3.com servers. The assumption was that if you had physical access to the CD then you had rights to stream the music.

    111. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by HermMunster · · Score: 1

      There has to be probable cause. They won't just get warrants to search your account because they think you have music stored there that you obtained through copyright violations. That'd be like saying that the music cartel could get a warrant to search your home because over a 6 month period you bought 3 2tb drives. It's just not enough probable cause. They'd need to show that you are distributing and provide proof of that.

      I wonder if the music cartel will convince ICE and DSH to seize Amazon.com.

      --
      You can lead a man with reason but you can't make him think.
    112. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by bruce_the_loon · · Score: 1

      They'll make use of the de-duplicating features of whatever massive SANs they'll be using for this Cloud Drive. It will be completely automatic and Amazon can say "Oh gosh darn, that danged thing did it out the box"

      --
      Trying to become famous by taking photos. Visit my homepage please.
    113. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by TaoPhoenix · · Score: 1

      Mod this insightful gang,

      This is a brand new weakness of the Cloud. In the tussle between "the Cloud keeps your data confidential" and "Laws don't apply to music", take a gander who wins!

      See the new trend of bait and switch privacy settings.

      --
      My first Journal Entry ever, in 8 years! http://slashdot.org/journal/365947/aphelion-scifi-fantasy-horror-poetry-webzine
    114. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Mordok-DestroyerOfWo · · Score: 1

      I suspect that, behind the scenes, if a two users upload identical files Amazon will only store one copy.

      I really hope not, I have a lot of metadata embedded in my MP3s that helps with syncing and organizing in my own peculiar way.

      --
      "Never let your sense of morals prevent you from doing what is right" - Salvor Hardin
    115. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by HermMunster · · Score: 1

      Probably a patented business model to boot.

      --
      You can lead a man with reason but you can't make him think.
    116. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But none of these steps would be legal in any jurisdiction where format shifting is allowed.

      Can someone who knows their stuff enlighten us to what jurisdictions allow format shifting? ...now whether we agree with this is a different and more interesting issue, but before dissenting it's good to at least know where you stand legally,

    117. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I store it on a file server on my local network and stream it to whichever computer / device I want to use, is this legal?
      I move the file server into a colo and stream it from there, is this legal?

      If you do not own the computer/device it happens in the first line quoted, otherwise the change happens when moving it to the colo, as that is not your property.

    118. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by amRadioHed · · Score: 1

      The "logic" involved in these copyright cases makes my brain hurt. An individual copy of each mp3 is streamed to each user of mp3.com, just as each person who buys an mp3 from Amazon.com gets their own copy. There is no logical distinction between the two.

      --
      We hope your rules and wisdom choke you / Now we are one in everlasting peace
    119. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the Music & Film Industry had their way then everything on your list would be illegal.
      Then the music publishers would want royalties for the possibilty that you might at some point hum/whistle/tap out/sing the tune as well.
      Oh and don't forget the royalties if you write a sentence that includes a phrase from even one of their songs.
      (She Loves you...)

      Even though I won't use this service, I applaud Amazon for going this far and effectively saying to the RIAA etc,
      'come on then sue me..."

    120. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by LordStormes · · Score: 1

      And then they'd have to prove you gave your password out deliberately, as opposed to just getting haxx0red by the 1337 ninjas on the Starbucks wifi. And they have to hope you didn't use a $50 pre-paid Visa debit card and a fake address to buy your first MP3 to create the account with. Or better yet, the bad guys make an Amazon account with legitimate credit card data that they stole from some company that failed PCI compliance, and now it's some random Joe's ass when 200,000 people are downloading Lady Gaga from an account with his credit card on it.

    121. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is where I think Steven Kinsella is absolutely right, copyright has no natural right foundation for this issue to be decided (in a way in favor of the music industry), therefore this will simply be a game of who has the most money they are willing to sped on lawyers.

    122. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Put the storage team in a room and ask them to design and implement a dedup system. Don't tell them what it's for, don't tell them anything about the nature of the files. All they know is that they're storing data more efficiently.

      Which seems perfectly valid, such a system could be applied to any storage system, regardless of content.

      Then don't TELL anyone about the super efficient storage system you have in place... ...solution?

    123. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is currently a legal gray area in the US around whether or not streaming of content is performance or distribution. Depending on how this ends up ruled, it could affect Amazon's case.

    124. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Cheviot · · Score: 1

      They wouldn't need to prove anything. They'd just cut off the account the first time there is more than say 5 logins from geographically separated locations within one hour.

    125. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://www.myspace.com/asininerecords

    126. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by calmofthestorm · · Score: 1

      Arguably this could make more sense than the current system; it would all depend on the price. I'd pay $0.01/hr for music playing if it meant no more headaches about getting it, DRM, etc.

      --
      93rd rule of Slashdot: No matter how obvious my sarcasm is, my comment will be taken seriously by someone.
    127. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...but it's still uploaded by the user, even if later it becomes a hard link.

    128. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is also asinine to claim 76 trillion dollars in damages from a file sharing site. That hasn't stopped the record industry from claiming this grievance with a straight face before a judge who probably takes their job rather seriously. Of couse, as a user of a self-made streaming cloud music player, I watch this very closely. I don't have the lawyers to fight off multi-quadrillion dollar claims in court.

    129. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by stonewallred · · Score: 1
      Amazon has money, lawyers and a bunch of clout. I am figuring the music industry will bite off much more than they can chew if they go to court on this.

      Especially in a jury trial, since the average person will have difficulty understanding why these music bigwigs are trying to force Amazon to pay a fee in order to allow folks to listen to their own music.

      Once the Amazon lawyers make clear that all they are doing is the same thing as an external hard drive, the music industry is fucked.

    130. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by anyGould · · Score: 1

      My favorite is that after winning the argument that you have to pay royalties for playing music in a bar or office (since it's a business environment and the company is benefiting from it), they were suggesting that truckers should have to pay royalties for listening to the radio.

    131. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Danish_guy · · Score: 1

      If you live in Denmark all those steps are completely legal. as long as only you have access to the content in question.

    132. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by amRadioHed · · Score: 1

      Where does your hacked client get the correct checksum values from? You need to have access to the mp3 in the first place in order to get the correct checksum and if that's the case then you could just have uploaded the mp3 to Amazon instead of uploading the checksum and you would still have access.

      --
      We hope your rules and wisdom choke you / Now we are one in everlasting peace
    133. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by calmofthestorm · · Score: 1

      The BSA has successfully used ratio of Windows licenses to computers purchased to obtain warrants.

      --
      93rd rule of Slashdot: No matter how obvious my sarcasm is, my comment will be taken seriously by someone.
    134. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by tsm_sf · · Score: 1

      You own the iPod hardware. You do not own Amazon's cloud storage.

      I certainly don't, as Apple takes great pains to point out, own the iPod software.

      If I (here it comes, /.) rent a car, would we be having a discussion about not owning the CD player therein?

      --
      Literalism isn't a form of humor, it's you being irritating.
    135. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by tbannist · · Score: 2

      I'd bet the music industry would be for this as long as everyone was required to pay it, and you'd require 24 hour coverage. So the world would only have to pay them $613.2 billion a year for the privilege of not being harassed.

      Of course, that money would immediately be re-invested in increasing the hourly price to $0.02/hr.

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    136. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by TheThiefMaster · · Score: 1

      Someone could post the checksum to a website. They wouldn't be guilty of copyright infringement in doing that (I don't think) but the appropriate hacked client could then get the file from Amazon easy.

    137. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Combatso · · Score: 2

      You can hire someone to beat your meat.. You just can't solicit a meat-beater, and the meat-beater cant solicit beat-meat. Atleast where I live.

      I had way to much fun writing that.. even if I am wrong.

    138. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you move the file server into your culo and stream it from there, is this legal?

    139. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Methuseus · · Score: 1

      Because some people would rather not pay the power to run their PCs 24/7. You may not need it, but I would like it.

      --
      Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity, though I'm not yet sure about the universe. - A Einstein
    140. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Combatso · · Score: 1

      Ridiculous isn't it.. If they store two copies of the same identicle file (redundant wording, i know) then its illegal. How will anything innovative ever evolve if these archaic companies prevent Amazon from running efficiently...

    141. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Combatso · · Score: 1

      >

      I'm surprised their lawyer team didn't work things out with the various studios, the RIAA, and the mole people before going live with this thing.

      You assume its possible to 'work things out' with the music industry? That, my friend.. is the very definition of "a deal with the devil"

    142. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by chaboud · · Score: 1

      Oh yes, and you need to have a place for people to file notices of infringement.

      Fortunately the "you only access your stuff" part of this means that any claim of infringement would be ridiculous. SkyDrive, DropBox, and plain old email still make this one a no-brainer.

      That's why it's a 50/50 thing in court.

      Welcome to America.

    143. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by anyGould · · Score: 1

      I'm surprised their lawyer team didn't work things out with the various studios, the RIAA, and the mole people before going live with this thing.

      That doesn't surprise me at all. As the saying goes, it's easier to get forgiveness than permission. If they'd negotiated in advance, RIAA can make up all the possible horror stories they want as reasons why It Can't Be Done. Having a live service up and running means that RIAA has to argue against what's actually happening (as others have noted - essentially DropBox), which is a trickier thing to sell to politicians and consumers.

    144. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      Thing is, when a massive company is on the other side, they won't let such judge in. This isn't TPB where they counted on justice to actually do its job properly - big companies know that to work properly, wheels of justice need to be greased.

      Which is why such judge will never be allowed anywhere close to a case like this by amazon's lawyers. They will have enough of a budget to make sure courtroom isn't stacked against them like that.

    145. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Gofyerself · · Score: 1

      De-duplication???

    146. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Sechr+Nibw · · Score: 2

      In the world of tomorrow!...music file sharing sites would just be pages and pages of correct MD5 hashes with a hacked client, so you could "upload" a file without getting anywhere near the MP3.

    147. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Enry · · Score: 1

      Sony and friends are not the people that need to be convinced - it'll be a judge and possibly jury.

    148. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I'm of two minds on this one. When you purchase a CD, you do get license to play that CD, fair use, etc.

      No, you don't. Repeat after me, you do NOT need a license to play a CD you bought. You do NOT need a license to read a book you bought. And so on.

      You OWN the physical medium, and you can do whatever you want with that. You can microwave it. You can use it as a coaster. You can even put it into a CD player and press "play". None of that requires a license.

      In fact, you can do ANYTHING you want with it, save for a few things that you could otherwise do with the data on the disc (or in the book, etc.) that copyright law does not allow you to. I can't give you an exhaustive list, but it's things such as distribution, public performance and so on.

      Everything else is by definition within your rights - and not because you have a license allowing you these things, but because noone, especially not the copyright holder, has any say in whether you get to do these things.

      Don't fall for the "you're not allowed to do anything unless you have a valid license" crap.

    149. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by hedwards · · Score: 1

      That's not true. As far as what you do with your copy, they don't get a say, so long as you don't distribute it or use it as a performance.

    150. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Golddess · · Score: 1

      (since it's once of the leading music retailers)

      Serious question. What is Amazon's position as a book retailer? Because the Author's Guild seemed to have an easy time getting Amazon to change its mind with the Kindle's text-to-speech.

      But maybe the Author's Guild has some sort of extra sway that the RIAA does not.

      --
      "I'm not sure I like the fugnutish tone you used in your post!" -RogL (608926)-
    151. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by jdgeorge · · Score: 1

      Sony sues people for even looking funny at their IP.

      That's wierd... I have been sticking my tongue at , making faces toward , and otherwise disrespecting 64.37.182.61 for weeks now and they have not even made a peep...

      Maybe they are getting soft...

      Good chuckle. If I had mod points, you'd get one.

    152. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by $RANDOMLUSER · · Score: 1

      You make it sound as if EITHER party in a lawsuit has ANY control over which judge hears the case. Hint: it's nothing at all like jury selection. The best either party can do is politely and meekly request a judge recuse themselves - and better have a damn good reason for doing so; "we don't think you'll be honest and fair" isn't going to play too well.

      --
      No folly is more costly than the folly of intolerant idealism. - Winston Churchill
    153. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by mdielmann · · Score: 1

      Well, if someone has the same metadata embedded in their mp3 file, why would you care if they have two copies or one? And if it doesn't it's not identical, is it?

      --
      Sure I'm paranoid, but am I paranoid enough?
    154. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Dahamma · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I loved MP3.com. Problem (for them) was that it was completely trivial to "beam" your CDs (ie the hash code it calculated) to all of your friends' accounts (or just share yours, since you could stream to 3 computers at a time. Not to mention the fact that it was trivial to write a program/script to scrape the HTML and download the MP3s. In fact, if you bandwidth was good enough, it was faster to beam up your CD and then download the MP3s than it was to rip and encode them...

    155. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by fahrbot-bot · · Score: 1

      Hell, Sony sues people for even looking funny at their IP.

      To be fair, "64.37.182.61" is hilarious.

      --
      It must have been something you assimilated. . . .
    156. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It was NEVER known as MyMP3.com.

      It always was mp3.com.

    157. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by HeronBlademaster · · Score: 1

      I would be extremely surprised if Could Drive did de-duplication like that. Cloud Drive is built on S3; S3 is not designed to do de-duplication (as a cursory examination of the S3 product page will tell you).

    158. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Aqualung812 · · Score: 1

      When you purchase a CD, you do get license to play that CD

      I do? I've never seen a license. I've seen a disc with music on it, and a notice that I can't distribute it illegally, but I've never seen a license. I've certainly never agreed to a contract.

      --
      Grammer Nazis - I mod you "troll" unless you actually add something on-topic. Yes, I know I have mispellings in my sig.
    159. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by jbengt · · Score: 1

      When you purchase a CD, you do get license to play that CD, . . .

      No. You do not need any license to play your own CD, implied or explicit (unless it's a public or commercial performance). When you buy a CD, you can do anything you want with that CD (other than copying it, or using it as a murder weapon - but that's another story).

    160. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by the_fat_kid · · Score: 1

      1.- 6. "no" - RIAA

      --
      -- Sig under construction...
    161. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      Wish i had mod points. Funniest post so far today. Your sarcasm is duly noted.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    162. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dear TheRaven64,
      On behalf of the music industry I would like to express they joy we feel when we hear that you enjoy our intellectual property stored on a CD, I would also like to help you bring clarity when it comes to the questions you raise. Please find my comments below.

      >> I rip my CDs and play them, is this legal?
      No, that is considered to be piracy
      >> I stream the ripped music from my laptop to my hifi, is this legal?
      No, without a 8000 bit encryption we would face an obvious risk of having the content intercepted and distributed to a wider circle.
      >> I store it on a file server on my local network and stream it to whichever computer / device I want to use, is this legal?
      Absolutely not, that would allow massive distribution of our intellectuality property.
      >> I move the file server into a colo and stream it from there, is this legal?
      No, this would be a serious violation of copyright law
      >> I replace the dedicated server with a VM on someone else's system, is this legal?
      No, to that we would have to respond with litigation against both you, the other party, the supplier of the piracy server and the supplier of electricity.
      >> I replace the dedicated VM with an account on someone else's system, is this legal?
      No, this would be comparable with the criminal act mentioned above.

      All of the above actions would only serve the purpose of piracy - after all why would anyone go through all that hassle when there are perfectly good portable CD players out there? However, if you are interested in realizing the above ideas legally our member organisations would be prepared to offer you a beneficial licensing option where you pay a monthly fee of 1 million US dollars per user of the internet. The industry that I represent would,with this generous offer, like to show that we are open to technical development.

      Your early feedback is much appreciated.

      Sincerly,
      Thomas Guntman on behalf of Recording Industry Association of America
      1025 F ST N.W., 10th Floor
      Washington, D.C. 20004

    163. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      Except it will most likely be on the S3 storage and there will be no massive SAN. Although S3 will de-dupe it on the fly and reproduce a fault tolerant number of dupes across different nodes as needed.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    164. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by muindaur · · Score: 1

      At least I think the judge would be guilty of an ethics violation, and they are punished for it in Texas at least. So Amazon could make it clear that they will file a complaint if a judge with monetary, board, or a position of interest in the music industry presided over the case. To me they have the money to risk if they are fined for just making that threat.

      http://www.texascivilrightsproject.org/?p=2312

    165. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      Yeah? Try playing your CD in your bar or place of business sometime, and see how fast the BMI ass-rapes you. Read up on the subject if you like.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    166. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by tobiah · · Score: 1

      Yup, storing and streaming all of that music in massive redundancy is going to be very wasteful and expensive. It's also going to be rather inconvenient, and runs into the same problem local music libraries have, which is organizing the music, and getting bored with the songs you own. Without a convenient and free mechanism for music discovery, this service isn't going to amount to much more than a small value-added service to Amazon purchases. But it may crack the door open for others to deliver an efficient and convenient service.

      --
      "The ability to delude yourself may be an important survival tool" - Jane Wagner -
    167. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      That's exactly the logic that mp3.com used (only with the whole CD instead of just one mp3). You see where that got them.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    168. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In this case the issue is that I already own a license that permits me to use the digital song. If they want to amend that license, what happens? Currently it seems we're in the business of allowing everyone to simply amend every user agreement ad infinitum without the approval of the other party involved. Typically that is achieved through the clauses that require arbitration instead of litigation for breaches of the agreement (contract). I'm getting really tired of this personally. Basically almost every technology service whether it be cell phone, online game profile, or other such are allowed by the clauses in their agreements to change said agreement any time they please and there is really not much of anything you can do about it. This is infuriating when those agreements change to my detriment, which is of course why they do things that way.

    169. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by lgw · · Score: 1

      The real, fundamental difference between Amazon and MP3.com is that Amazon can afford better laywers than the RIAA. If Amazon is serious about this, and willing to stand up and fight, they have the budget to do so. None of the failed startups in this area had that legal budget.

      The best case is that this goes to court, and maybe sets a bit of precedent, or at least a set of successful legal arguments on the side of sanity. More likely, the RIAA makes some noise and then gives up, to avoid losing in court.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    170. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by flymolo · · Score: 1

      It's usually block level, so if you and I rip a CD it's possibly that we share most blocks except where I had a scratch, or we share just the metadata because we both ripped with the same program.

      --
      "Sometimes it's hard to tell the dancer from the dance." --Corwin Of Amber in CoC
    171. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      that's why de-dupe is block level. only the first block with the metadata will be unique to you, the rest of the file will be de-duped.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    172. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by dadelbunts · · Score: 1

      They try to fuck you two ways. First they sell you physical media, but then they act like thats meaningless and you bought a license to use it. Want to make a backup of the physical media you bought? Too fucking bad you only bought a license to use it. Your cd broke and you would like to download the music you paid for? Too fucking bad you bought physical media.

    173. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by jgagnon · · Score: 1

      They problem is they would want to charge you $0.30 per minute.

      --
      Remember to maintain your supply of /facepalm oil to prevent chafing.
    174. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And if they actively solicit such content from users? This is not some random posting by someone on Youtube of a baby dancing with "Band X" playing in the background via a radio. Google doesn't go out and solicit licensed content for YouTube.

      You need to read up on the DMCA Safe Harbor provisions. ISPs and hosting providers are *not* responsible for the content pushed to them by users. Besides, it's a private, per-user setup.

      Amazon is building an infrastructure around specifically hosting music files which the vast majority will require licensing with no requirement to verify that said users have actually licensed such music.

    175. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by gstoddart · · Score: 1

      It's usually block level, so if you and I rip a CD it's possibly that we share most blocks except where I had a scratch, or we share just the metadata because we both ripped with the same program.

      Even if I rip to MP3? I just figured different machines would generate different MP3s, even under similar circumstances, but that might be naive.

      I guess it makes sense that the same program ripping to MP3 at the same settings on two different machines should generate the same output.

      I suspect different MP3 encoders would produce different files ... or is the encoding pretty consistent? I've never looked closely at the actual mechanics of it.

      --
      Lost at C:>. Found at C.
    176. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by mrrudge · · Score: 1

      Dropbox takes a hash of the file that you're uploading/storing and if they find they have it already they don't do the transfer over the Internet, they just copy their local file to your account. Machines on local networks sync via LAN not Internet.

      For Amazon mp3 purchases from them they copy the file to your account also, just one download for your local copy.
      For mp3's ripped and/or bought elsewhere they will probably already have a matching copy, so no transfer will take place.

      Certainly the more popular songs I store in my dropbox a/c don't upload. Same for movies.

      Also. Please look up 'html line break's, they work in /. posts and would have made yours much more easily readable.

    177. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Jason+Levine · · Score: 1

      No, the difference between MP3.com and Amazon is that MP3.com did the ripping themselves. It might seem like a trivial distinction to you and me, but essentially what MP3.com did was create a copy of a CD and then distribute that copy to anyone who put the same CD in their computer's CD player. That was "legally grey" enough (and the RIAA-MP3.com legal difference was big enough) that MP3.com was forced to stop.

      What Amazon is doing is letting people upload their own MP3s. You take a CD you bought, rip it yourself (fair use) and upload it to your account on Amazon's servers. The files are kept accessible to just you (unless you share your Username/Password which Amazon could make a violation of their TOS and grounds for kicking the person off the servers) so sharing/distribution isn't an issue. If the RIAA wants to claim that uploading fair use ripped music is a violation, then all web hosting providers would need licenses from all of the recording labels since their products *could* be used to store music files. (Of course, the RIAA's wet dream is the complete ban of not only hosting music online in any format, but making ripping your CDs to MP3 illegal as well. Luckily for us, though, they don't have laws of that nature in place yet.)

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    178. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      this sounds like a great business strategy. perhaps we could get a hold of a nice domain name like mp3.com, and register the service under my.mp3.com or something.

      You in as a partner for this deal, what could possibly go wrong?

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    179. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only, but very important difference is that a $53 million lawsuit won't bankrupt Amazon.

    180. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by omnichad · · Score: 1

      You'd better not get a song stuck in your head. Those playback performances in your head and reproductions by humming are all infringements.

    181. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Compaqt · · Score: 1

      Also, I wonder if the RIAA might clarify if it's OK to store music in place I don't own (such as a rented apartment) or if I can only store it in place that I own myself (such as house with the mortgage paid off).

      --
      I'm not a lawyer, but I play one on the Internet. Blog
    182. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by SoCalChris · · Score: 1

      Who says Amazon is going to be storing every copy that everyone uploads? I would imagine that their file uploader creates a hash of the file before uploading it, and checks if that file has already been uploaded. If it's already been uploaded by another user, no need to waste their bandwidth uploading and storing it again. This is likely a very efficient way for a lot of people to store and access their music.

    183. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, no... no one owns the music. We have just given the artist a license to give us a license to play it

    184. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Sancho · · Score: 1

      You can own a copy of the music. That's why it's called "copyright." In fact, absent a license that I've agreed to, that's exactly what I own when I buy a CD. A copy, the creation of which was authorized by the copyright holder.

    185. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Assmasher · · Score: 1

      Man... The pron industry is going to own my a**...

      --
      Loading...
    186. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by VortexCortex · · Score: 2

      I, for one, do not want to be the expert witness who has to parse out the differences between storing multiple copies, symlinks, hardlinks, file-level deduplication, block-level deduplication, whatever jiggery-pokery Amazon's EBS volumes use, whatever different jiggery-pokery supports objects and buckets on S3, to a layman jury and a judge who may or may not have gone to lawyer school back when glass ttys were pretty cool stuff...

      It may well be even worse because, since copyright law was written more or less entirely without any reference to contemporary storage, the decision might well hinge on some combination of how the backend works and what abstraction or abstractions are used to present the data to the user.

      Yeah, well, If you really want to blow their mind have someone explain how their beloved Internet actually works ( multiple copies of each packet are made as they bounce from router to router until they get to the destination ). Honestly, "copy" rights in this, the information age, are incredibly out-dated and inadequate. Seems to me like everyone is just ignoring how it all really works down at the packet / cache level.

      On just about every web page you'll find a copyright notice, which aren't even necessary, a copyright of "all-rights reserved" is implied on everything we write (US law).

      I've yet to find a web-host that says something along the lines of: By tagging a file's metadata as publicly accessible you agree to sublicense such content for redistribution by way of any and every router or otherwise Internet connected device.

      How many unlicensed duplications are made per connection? Run a trace-route (" # traceroute yro.slashdot.org" on *nix, or " >tracert yro.slashdot.org" on Windows) to find out -- don't forget to count the one in your browser's cache, the one in your RAM, the copy in video RAM too (even if not hardware accelerated the image must be composited before display), oh, and if this get's paged out to disk -- that's another copy, a hibernation will make duplicates too.

      I average about 20 copies per web resource, at about 30 individual resources per page view, that's around 600 unlicensed copies / copyright violations per visitor -- Let the madness begin.

    187. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by omnichad · · Score: 1

      If you had storage the size of theirs, you would use pointers for redundant blocks of a file. So if two people rip a CD at the same bitrate with the same encoder, you might get portions that are bit-for-bit identical. If those users both retrieved CDDB track information the tags might even be the same. But they're going to store it such that it's provably the same bits uploaded twice, and not just deduplicating by file or track name.

    188. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's all very simple! Whenever a user wants to upload a file, a file containing various checksums of the file (a flurry-file) is created on the users machine. Said flurry is then added to amazons cloud hash table (or CHT for short). Now at this point a duplicate check is performed. If the flurry is not already in the CHT, the file is automatically downloaded to one of amazons cloud-boxes. Whenever the user wants to access his file, he logs in to his cloud account, downloads the flurry, and can download his file from the amazon cloudboxes. Should another user want to download the same file at the same time, the protocol transparently uses a multiple paths transparent cache download algorithm to ease the load on amazons cloudboxes by letting users cache certain "blocks" for each other. This is tamperproof since the flurry-file contains hashes that can be used to verify the correctness of the file

    189. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by wagnerrp · · Score: 1

      So the fact that you're buying computers but not buying Windows licenses implies you must be pirating Windows?

    190. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually I, as a published author, am of the opinion that this needs to end. We can all stop listening to it as it provides essential requirements for our survival. We all choose to entertain ourselves with it. Yes, its important for musicians to make money. However, I think that a demand to buy numerous copies is blackmail. The only people that deserve the money are those that physically provide a serve or help to the actual musician. The RIAA execs can have their heads ripped off by the skyline aliens for all i care. (Man, was that a bad movie.) So in short, if you make it, its like a chair. I buy a copy of the chair, its mine. If you don't like that, don't distribute. Honestly, most people can't write crap, or sing worth crap or really do anything creative. Yet this is never going to happen because people with money like their money and since it imbues them with power, nothing will change (at least until the 9.0 earthquake in LA kills them all)

    191. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude! Cloud hash? I didn't know you could buy weed from Amazon. Is a hash table some kind of European bong or something?

    192. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by kabloie · · Score: 1

      How is Amazon going to prevent someone from sharing out their username and password?

      If you pay for 100 GB of space, Amazon is going to have your credit card sitting in that account ready to rip. That's one clear disincentive.

      Only new accounts with 5 GB of free space would work for this. Not exactly ripe for abuse, but who knows.

    193. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by WilCompute · · Score: 1

      The only issue that Sony might be able to capitalize on is the fact that Amazon is PLAYING the music for you on the web in the form of the Amazon Cloud Player. Another issue is that you were already able to do this in the form of their cloud service, they are specifically targeting music with this pricing and advertising effort. If they were just streaming the files, and providing a means to integrate into an existing player, they could say that they were just offering a home targeted version of their existing services, but as it is, we must wait and see.
      P.S. I actually want Amazon to succeed.

      --
      NDxTreme Content on the Edge.
    194. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by wagnerrp · · Score: 1

      I was watching TED yesterday and a speaker said that it takes the energy of a lump of coal to download a million bytes of data.

      WTF....

      Are you talking about lignite? Bituminous? Anthracite? They all have different energy densities. How much is a lump? Is it measured in volume or weight? Are you downloading from a local file server? Are you using wireless? Are you using copper ethernet, or fiber ethernet, or RS-232? How many hops are there to the server? What physical distance is it to the server? Are there any submarine links in between?

      Statements like that are completely absurd. They are so open ended as to have absolutely no meaning.

    195. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by wagnerrp · · Score: 1

      If the files are uploaded to Amazon encrypted, then the files will not be identical, and there will be no possibility for de-duplication.

    196. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Luckyo · · Score: 1

      I don't think you get it. When you have sufficient pull, you can influense people in position to set judges for your case.

      Actual legal options are for the poor.

      Case to point: Sweden, TPB. And Sweden was one of the few countries that was known as one that doesn't bend over backwards for money for a while, unlike good old US of A.

    197. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by nateross · · Score: 1

      The license to play it isn't affected by this, it's simply where the file is stored. Playing it in front of an audience, from the cloud or disk is a violation. Storing it on CD, USB Key or the cloud shouldn't be... however, ultimately it will boil down to legal issue that will be interesting to watch being sorted out.

    198. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by OrigamiMarie · · Score: 1

      One can hope . . .

    199. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by wagnerrp · · Score: 1

      That's assuming the metadata block is identical from one file to the next. Different rippers use different size blocks. Users will have different sized coverart attached, which further breaks block alignment. Further, this is all assuming the users are all either storing uncompressed content, used the same revision compressor with the same settings to independently produce bit perfect replicas, or (gasp) they all illegally downloaded the same copy from the same source.

    200. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Mogusha · · Score: 1

      I like how in Canada it's allowed to copy a friend's CD they lend to you, but you can't have your friend copy the CD and give it to you. http://neil.eton.ca/copylevy.shtml So, there are quite some differences between how the media is copied and who is doing the copying. Not quite ripping your own stuff, but at least ripping things that would become yours after the fact. Even though the end result is the exact same.

    201. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by ChienAndalu · · Score: 1

      I do not understand how grooveshark.com is still around

    202. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      You make it sound as if EITHER party in a lawsuit has ANY control over which judge hears the case.

      And you make it sound like you are an ignorant idiot talking about things they don't understand. Or, are you honestly asserting that plaintiffs don't choose the East Texas courts because of the judges who will be hearing those cases? Or that once filed there, the defendants don't take action to get the venue (and thus judge) changed?

      You are asserting that neither party has any control. That is completely false. They may not be able to pick the judge by name in every case, but they certainly can pick the pool from which the judge will be selected, and once selected have options available for changing judges.

    203. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by wagnerrp · · Score: 1

      This could mean that if you and I upload the same MP3 file to our individual personal cloud drives, they'll end up being physically stored as a single set of 0's and 1's at the lowest level.

      Funny that, where are you and I going to get the same MP3 file? Between errors during ripping, changes in compressor settings, changes in compressor revisions, changes in stored metadata, you and I will be incapable of independently producing bit perfect copies of the same song. Online stores selling DRM free music are still going to tag them against a certain user. The only way we could get the same exact file is if it were released under some open license, or if we illegally downloaded it from the source. From a legal standpoint, de-duplication of such material simply doesn't make sense.

    204. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Em+Adespoton · · Score: 1

      Generally, if it's legal for you to do something, it's legal for you to employ someone to do it on your behalf. I would be surprised if it would be illegal for me to, say, pay someone to come round to my house and rip my CDs for me. Amazon's system seems to be broadly analogous.

      Interestingly, in the UK, both are illegal. In Canada, it is legal for you to rip for personal use, but illegal to do it for profit, or redistribute -- which means it would be illegal to pay someone to rip your CDs. It is not illegal to pay someone to lend you CDs (rent) to rip yourself, however.

      This is probably why Amazon has limited this service to US IP addresses.

    205. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Translation+Error · · Score: 1

      They'd try to charge a licensing fee for streaming music from your ears to your brain if they thought they could get away with it.

      --
      When someone says, "Any fool can see ..." they're usually exactly right.
    206. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think that's entirely true. While you may not be able to directly influence which judge gets the case, I think that some amount of gaming over where the case is tried has an impact on the pool of judges likely to try the case.

    207. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      (unless it's a public or commercial performance)

      Perhaps you need to read again more slowly. He addressed that.

    208. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by hoppo · · Score: 1

      Not sure why this surprises you.

      This is all part of negotiation strategy. Amazon wants a favorable deal, so they're going to press forward. Recording companies are going to tread lightly here, because Amazon represents significant enough portion of those companies' revenue to be in a good bargaining position. It may seem unfathomable, but what if Amazon put the nuclear option on the table -- this is the way we're going to do it, and if you don't like it then we'll pull every single one of your products, all the way from CDs and DVDs to Kiss Army collectors' plates -- from our store. Do you really think the recording companies wouldn't blink first then? In the end, Amazon could walk out of this not only with still not having to expand their licensing agreements, but with a better share of the music they sell.

    209. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Guess this is the new meaning of 'dirty bits' after 2YK..

    210. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by eyrieowl · · Score: 1

      Terms of Service almost certainly prohibit it. That, and evidence that they'll cut you off if they catch you violating those TOS would probably be enough "something in place" for the courts.

    211. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by markass530 · · Score: 1

      small difference here, Mp3.com just asked you to prove you owned the disc, then provided people with THEIR Copy. You didn't upload anything. This is just cloud storage, individual style.

    212. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by chaboud · · Score: 1

      You presume that privately storing private files associated only with your private account would warrant a license beyond that of the original media.

      Keep in mind that I'm not against digital rights here. I'm against Digital Rights Management and all of the buyer-abusive double-dipping that the labels have been looking to do since the dawn of the labels.

      Perhaps they didn't get enough from me when I bought it on vinyl, or when I also bought it on CD, or when they got a kickback from CD-Rs that were used to burn data for the "inevitable infringement" that would occur, or when they got a fee for public performance, or when they got a fee for streaming internet radio.

      The only battles that they've ever really lost?
      - Radio play
      - Resembling reasonable, ethical human beings

      If I'm not sharing it with anyone else, I already overpaid for the CD due to price fixing. Eff off.

    213. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by _0xd0ad · · Score: 1

      Playing it in front of an audience, from the cloud or disk is a violation. Storing it on CD, USB Key or the cloud shouldn't be... however, ultimately it will boil down to legal issue that will be interesting to watch being sorted out.

      And that's what it really amounts to. Every time a new way to store or play media for your own personal use, the thieves want to make you pay for it again to have the privilege of using that new method on what you already had a copy of. And every time it takes a long drawn-out legal battle to decide that yes, you are allowed to store your copy wherever you like and convert it into whatever form you like to be played back on whatever device you like.

    214. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by _0xd0ad · · Score: 1

      They most certainly do get a say. They're suing. That's their way of saying things. They might lose, but not without a battle.

    215. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by HermMunster · · Score: 1

      It's easier to turn off a feature than to shut down a service. You spend much more money designing a service than you do a feature of another product.

      And, they'd probably have won, though I'm sure there was a lot of other forms of pressure exerted against Amazon in contrast to face-forward influences we all saw publicly reported.

      --
      You can lead a man with reason but you can't make him think.
    216. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by HermMunster · · Score: 1

      And the Judge issuing them should be impeached for incompetence.

      --
      You can lead a man with reason but you can't make him think.
    217. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 1

      A LOT.

      Of course, DEPENDING on how the contract's worded.

      I don't have their contracts in hand, i suspect it's Amazon playing hardball, however, I don't expect them to win this.

      --
      Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
    218. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      With Napster, Kazaa and Limewire, "the user ha[d] to upload the content rather than it originating from a central source." And that did not help their cause. No, it is better to verify than not verify.
      There *has* to be a way to verify ownership online without invading privacy. I know, let's invent one! Ooops already invented. It's called the Digital Content Exchange:

      http://www.scribd.com/doc/45065580/A-New-and-Totally-Untried-Method-for-Controlling-and-Monetizing-Digital-Media-the-DCE

    219. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      which is insane. If it's the same data, why should we need to make many copies?

      Because the music industry hates the planet. So does Hollywood - they won't let me stream movies I want, insisting on having my agent put plastic discs in paper envelopes and pushing them over asphalt roads in diesel trucks.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    220. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      I think they're most annoyed by the fact that Amazon dared to 1) promote this specifically for streaming music, and 2) include in-browser and Android apps that make such streaming trivial even for casual user. When RIAA suits consider how many people would likely use the service, and then translate to the amount of money they'd get if Amazon were to be forced to pay license fees for that, they lose mind of anything but those imaginary $$$.

    221. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by c0lo · · Score: 1

      How is Amazon going to prevent someone from sharing out their username and password?

      If you pay for 100 GB of space, Amazon is going to have your credit card sitting in that account ready to rip. That's one clear disincentive.

      Throw-away CC-s?

      --
      Questions raise, answers kill. Raise questions to stay alive.
    222. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by bearoderse · · Score: 1

      I have seen this my.mp3.com argument a lot since this story broke but this is an invalid argument as it is comparing apples to oranges. The problem with mp3.com was that it was a file sharing service. In my.mp3.com, not only could you put up your own files to listen to them, you were encouraged to share your files, letting other people enjoy the music you had up while listening to music that others had put up. The my.mp3.com case had nothing to do with the storage of music but of music sharing and therefore allowing somebody access to a product that someone else had paid for. The Amazon case has nothing to do with music sharing, but purely of storage. To exaggerate an example to prove a point... If this case should go through then I believe the next viable law suit should be against Western Digital, because their evil "external hard drives" allow people to store their files on a source outside of their computer which allows them access to it on an INFINATE number of computers....

    223. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by internettoughguy · · Score: 1

      For example, I could have a hacked client that only passes you the correct checksum values, and suddenly you give me access to lots of files I don't have. How did that happen?

      How could that happen? You would need access to the file itself to calculate its hash. So you would need either access to either a friends music collection that they uploaded, or access to Amazon's servers, both of which would allow you to copy the file itself anyway. Then again I suppose people could just pastebin/email/IM each other hashes, instead of using torrents.

    224. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by WarJolt · · Score: 1

      By posting that on /. you probably increased Asinine's record audience by several factors of magnitude.

    225. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by batkiwi · · Score: 1

      And I would like a pony.

    226. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by jbezorg · · Score: 1

      I'm just glad RIAA can't crush Amazon by dragging out the process and make pursuing their interests in court cost too much. So you can guarantee that Amazon would file an appeal if it can be shown that the judge could have been biased in their ruling.

      --
      I've lost all my marbles except one & It's fun to test angular & centripetal acceleration in my skull
    227. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by david.given · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, their affiliate program is also asinine...

    228. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by mgiuca · · Score: 1

      So the law will essentially make a distinction between compressed and uncompressed files?

      In other words (to simplify things massively), if I upload my own MP3 file and you upload your own identical MP3 file, and Amazon stores them on a server as two distinct files, that's OK.

      But if Amazon applies gzip compression to their server, it will notice that the two files are identical and store the data only once. Now that's illegal because Amazon is serving two people with a single copy of the file.

      Your old laws do not work in this universe.

    229. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That was not the exact rationale, IMO, and is no help to Amazon.

      In the MP3.com case the judge mocked Robertson's suggestion that the mere insertion of a copy of the commercial CD into the user's computer CD-ROM drive for a few seconds in any way "proved" that he owned the recording. (Decision, SDNY 00 Civ. 472 p. 3). That method of verification is indeed inadequate because the user can subsequently sell the recording and still have cloud access to it, or the "proving" CD can itself be an illegal copy. If those problems are fixed and a better verification method is used there's no reason to believe that a central CD master/slave copying arrangement would not be considered fair use. Consider the sheer human waste of Amazon having to burn and store the same album 10 million times. No, there should be one master copy. No court in the world is going to interpret fair use as requiring 10 million "burns" for an identical item. The social waste of that is immense. Fair use and copyright were designed to promote social utility not social waste.

      The other problem was the way Robertson went about it. From the Judge's decision:

      Defendant MP3.com, on or around January 12, 2000, launched its
      "My.MP3.com" service, which it advertised as permitting
      subscribers to store, customize, and listen to the recordings
      contained on their CDs from any place where they have an Internet
      connection. To make good on this offer, defendant purchased tens
      of thousands of popular CDs in which plaintiffs held the
      copyrights, and, without authorization, copied their recordings
      onto its computer servers so as to be able to replay the
      recordings for its subscribers.

      Hint: don't start a business by going out and burning tens of thousands of someone else's copyright work. That was not a good way for Robertson to have begun. If that way was allowed to stand, every business in the world could run out and copy all the CDs in the world "anticipating" that users may want to prove they own them.

      However, if you have real verification of ownership, plus immobilization so that if the CD is sold it is removed from that user's "cloud" ... I am certain that a cloud service could rip that user's CD on his behalf. (See the Cablevision II case.) This is essentially what is done by the Digital Content Exchange.

    230. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by green1 · · Score: 1

      commenting to undo accidental "offtopic" moderation.

    231. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by exomondo · · Score: 1

      You own nothing but a license to play it under the terms that its real owner dictates

      And where does a music owner specify these terms? i don't think i've ever seen any agreement with regard to usage when i've bought tracks online.

    232. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by exomondo · · Score: 1

      It's a whole different ballgame when a for-profit company takes music it doesn't own, stores it, and streams it out, even if you are the one who is asking them to do so.

      So what you're saying is you shouldn't be allowed to store copies of licensed copyrighted data on rented or leased servers, it has to be a server you own?

    233. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      does dedup sit between the cloud drive and the users layer of encryption of said drive?

      If yes, then I say yes dedup can reduce the copies.
      elif, no, not a chance.

    234. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by yeshuawatso · · Score: 1

      If it's on camera and you intend on uploading it to the net, then it's legal as you're not soliciting prostitution, you're soliciting the free market

    235. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It doesn't have a crappy Apple-designed interface?

    236. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think possibly they are timing this move with the bleeding to death of the MAFIAA group. And they may be right.

      I have my own beef with Amazon thanks to the Wikileaks matter and won't be using them anyway.

    237. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Eth1csGrad1ent · · Score: 1

      Of course! And even better, the company you bought the machine from (without an OS) probably paid MS for an OEM license anyway, and MS are still gonna come after you :)

    238. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by wagnerrp · · Score: 1

      How do they even have access to your financials to know what you are and aren't buying? That has to be illegal in some fashion.

    239. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please report to the nearest organ donation location, citizen.

    240. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by RichiH · · Score: 1

      When going against Amazon? Those guys will fine-comb the background of anyone by default and doubly so when up against the RIAA.

    241. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's the metaphysics in play here that are crazy.. This is just a symptom.

    242. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Builder · · Score: 1

      Well, that is illegal in the UK. I'm a hardcore criminal in this country - I've committed hundreds of crimes by ripping CDs to iTunes. I've also committed multiple crimes (under the EUCD) by ripping DVDs to the family media player.

      On the plus side, knowing that I'm a criminal and eligible for years of jailtime from the crimes I've committed doing these things, it's a lot easier to not give a fuck about any other laws I might break.

    243. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Builder · · Score: 1

      > I rip my CDs and play them, is this legal?

      Not in the UK and multiple other countries. So I guess the rest is illegal because it all starts from an illegal act.

    244. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by slim · · Score: 1

      I think GP was being deliberately imprecise. Lots of stars would need to align in order for two people with the same CD to end up with exactly the same MP3, although if you both used cdparanoia and the same version of LAME, you could expect to.

      Different encoders will have different psycho-acoustic models; different versions of a psycho acoustic model will have tweaks here and there. CDs will be released at various volume levels, etc.

      With the block matching GP alluded to, a scratched CD might result in MP3s with lots of matching sequences, but not aligned to a block boundary.

      But with thousands of people uploading their own rips of the same CD, you could expect a good few matches.

    245. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by _0xd0ad · · Score: 1

      Your agreement is the standard license to play their copyrighted music for your personal use, which allows limited copying (under fair use) and doesn't allow you to play it for groups (public performance), etc. Since you're aware that the song is copyrighted, the standard license applies by default.

      Amazon's license is the one in question here... if they are allowed to sell the music, what sort of access are they allowed to give people to the music after it is purchased? And are they allowed to store and stream music that users upload? (Since that's basically just like an iPod with its storage in the cloud I don't see how that couldn't be permitted.)

      If they require you to actually download the MP3 and their cloud player requires you to re-upload it, there's no leg for the music industry to stand on whatsoever, but I can see where there could be a problem if the MP3 just shows up in your cloud player as soon as it is purchased. Though even then I think that should be perfectly acceptable.

    246. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Devoidoid · · Score: 1

      That shouldn't be too hard, since the judge that will hear the case will probably be a former RIAA lawyer.

      You mean former RIAA lobbyist. No need to be polite.

    247. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by jon3k · · Score: 1

      Sure - but how much did the proprietors walk away with?

    248. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by exomondo · · Score: 1

      That doesn't answer the question of where the owner of the copyright can dictate the terms of use, it appears - from what you're saying - that they can't and the only 'terms of use' is the 'fair use' policy for copyrighted material, the terms of which not dictated by the copyright owner.

    249. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by _0xd0ad · · Score: 1

      You're missing the part where Amazon is authorized to sell their music and has a license (an actual written contract) to do so. And their license doesn't say they're allowed to stream it. This has nothing to do with the buyer's license, which (as you correctly stated) is dictated by law and not dictated by the copyright holder.

    250. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is not YET the responsibility of ISPs...

      FTFY

      The RIAA has the money, our fine legislators have the habit.
      The rest is just amatter of time.
      --
      How the road is paved doesn't matter if you're already in hell.

    251. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by exomondo · · Score: 1

      You're missing the part where Amazon is authorized to sell their music and has a license (an actual written contract) to do so. And their license doesn't say they're allowed to stream it.

      I didn't miss that, i wasn't questioning that component of it.

    252. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by _0xd0ad · · Score: 1

      Then you're missing the part where that's what is in question here.

    253. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by _0xd0ad · · Score: 1

      they can't and the only 'terms of use' is the 'fair use' policy for copyrighted material, the terms of which not dictated by the copyright owner

      You're looking at it wrong - "fair use" is something that had to be wrestled from them by brute force of law, in the effect of "you can't prohibit people from doing this". The terms were so dictated by the copyright owners that the law had to intervene.

      Though you don't even need to dig that deep... the name gives it away. "Fair" use. When you're creating laws with words like "fair", it obviously implies that you think what was before wasn't fair. What was before was copyright holders dictating the terms of their copyright. What is now is only them dictating it still, with a few intervening laws to make their terms more "fair".

    254. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by exomondo · · Score: 1

      Then you're missing the part where that's what is in question here.

      No, you're trying to take it off-topic. I asked the question, this is nothing to do with Amazon or its license and wholly about who dictates the terms under which you can play licensed music. These terms are dictated by copyright law and not by the copyright owner.

    255. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by exomondo · · Score: 1

      You're looking at it wrong

      No, im just not going off-topic, go back and read it again, you wrote:
      You own nothing but a license to play it under the terms that its real owner dictates
      Copyright law dictates the terms of use, *not* the copyright owner.

    256. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by _0xd0ad · · Score: 1

      I was replying to someone who suggested that Amazon could allow streaming "one's own" music.

    257. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by _0xd0ad · · Score: 1

      No, you didn't - you replied to me. Go check the comment tree again.

      You're the one who changed the subject. I was never talking about the "agreement with regard to usage when [you buy] tracks online". That is not what I was talking about.

    258. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by exomondo · · Score: 1

      No, you didn't - you replied to me. Go check the comment tree again.

      You're the one who changed the subject. I was never talking about the "agreement with regard to usage when [you buy] tracks online". That is not what I was talking about.

      You wrote:
      You own nothing but a license to play it under the terms that its real owner dictates
      I responded to that and only that. The statement is bullshit because the real owner does not dictate the terms under which you can play it.

    259. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by exomondo · · Score: 1

      I was replying to someone who suggested that Amazon could allow streaming "one's own" music.

      So? In what way does a copyright owner dictate the terms under which the music can be played? The answer is that they can't.

    260. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by _0xd0ad · · Score: 1

      The statement is bullshit because the real owner does not dictate the terms under which you can play it.

      Sure they do. They've spent millions to have their say, and if they have a problem with the way you're using it, they'll spend millions more trying to make sure that people can't do it. And the limitations that have been imposed, by law, were only because people thought their original terms were slightly too unreasonable.

      So... you own nothing but a license to play it under the terms that its real owner dictates, to the extent that they're permitted by law. But it's ridiculously unnecessary for me to have to say that they aren't allowed to break the law...

    261. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by _0xd0ad · · Score: 1

      In what way does a copyright owner dictate the terms under which the music can be played?

      Try playing that CD or movie that you bought in front of a large enough audience, and you'll soon find out. If they find out they'll be coming after you because you don't have a license to "publicly" perform their work.

    262. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by exomondo · · Score: 1

      The statement is bullshit because the real owner does not dictate the terms under which you can play it.

      Sure they do. They've spent millions to have their say, and if they have a problem with the way you're using it, they'll spend millions more trying to make sure that people can't do it. And the limitations that have been imposed, by law, were only because people thought their original terms were slightly too unreasonable.

      So... you own nothing but a license to play it under the terms that its real owner dictates, to the extent that they're permitted by law. But it's ridiculously unnecessary for me to have to say that they aren't allowed to break the law...

      You own a license to play it under the terms dictated by copyright law, not by the owner of the music copyright. Let me put it to you this way. I am the real owner of music, how exactly do i dictate the terms - whatever terms i want - under which it is used?

    263. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by exomondo · · Score: 1

      In what way does a copyright owner dictate the terms under which the music can be played?

      Try playing that CD or movie that you bought in front of a large enough audience, and you'll soon find out. If they find out they'll be coming after you because you don't have a license to "publicly" perform their work.

      No, that's copyright law, not the copyright owner dictating those terms. You're avoiding the question because you can't answer it.

    264. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by _0xd0ad · · Score: 1

      Let me put it to you this way. I am the real owner of music, how exactly do i dictate the terms - whatever terms i want - under which it is used?

      You make people sign a contract stating the terms you want to give them, obviously. Such as the contract that Amazon is claiming they didn't need, which the RIAA is claiming they did need, to stream the music.

      Absent a signed contract, you're assumed to get the standard license described in copyright law, but if you don't think that (copyright law) has been (and still is, by legal precedence of court cases) heavily influenced by the music/film industries you're misleading yourself. So either way, it's the terms that the copyright holder has dictated to the fullest extent that the law has permitted them to.

    265. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by exomondo · · Score: 1

      Let me put it to you this way. I am the real owner of music, how exactly do i dictate the terms - whatever terms i want - under which it is used?

      You make people sign a contract stating the terms you want to give them, obviously.

      When have you ever signed a contract when buying music that told you how you can use it? As a copyright owner i don't dictate the terms, copyright law does.

    266. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by _0xd0ad · · Score: 1

      When have you ever signed a contract when buying a copyrighted work that told you how you can use it?

      Four letters: EULA.

      I've never had to sign a contract when buying music, but that's just because I was content to get the standard license, and they were content to sell me that.

    267. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by exomondo · · Score: 1

      When have you ever signed a contract when buying a copyrighted work that told you how you can use it?

      Four letters: EULA.

      So you've completely and utterly lost the argument which was directly related to music and only music that you've resorted to changing what i wrote in your quote to reflect a scenario that works for you. The fact that you've had to do that just shows how wrong you are and then put in a response that clearly does not answer the question i actually asked.

      I've never had to sign a contract when buying music, but that's just because I was content to get the standard license, and they were content to sell me that.

      So in the normal situation the copyright owner does not dictate the terms of use.

    268. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by _0xd0ad · · Score: 1

      So you've completely and utterly lost the argument which was directly related to music and only music

      So in the process of "winning" the argument about music, you've completely and utterly lost the argument which was directly related to copyright in general and copyrightable works in general. Your argument only holds for the specific case of music, and that only in the specific case of buying it without a contract, and that only because the industry chooses to sell it like that. If you wanted a license to stream it online, include it in a for-profit work, broadcast the music, etc. you would need a signed contract authorizing you to do so.

      So in the normal situation the copyright owner does not dictate the terms of use.

      They dictate that you're allowed to buy it under the standard terms allowed in copyright law rather than having to sign a contract. But if they wanted to sell you a contract with other terms, they could. So it's up to them, i.e. they dictate which you can buy because they control which they sell.

    269. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by exomondo · · Score: 1

      So you've completely and utterly lost the argument which was directly related to music and only music

      So in the process of "winning" the argument about music, you've completely and utterly lost the argument which was directly related to copyright in general and copyrightable works in general.

      No, because that argument was never taking place and i never said my comments applied to anything outside of music in any way, shape or form. You just tried to take it in that direction when you realised you comment was bullshit in the context of this discussion.

      Your argument only holds for the specific case of music, and that only in the specific case of buying it without a contract, and that only because the industry chooses to sell it like that.

      In other words, exactly in the context of the real world and of this discussion.

    270. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by _0xd0ad · · Score: 1

      i never said my comments applied to anything outside of music in any way, shape or form

      Ah. You live in some special fantasy world where "music" is magically protected under something other than "copyright" and is mysteriously different from every other form of copyrightable work.

      Right, I'll leave you to it then. As I have no idea what reality you live in, you're welcome to stay there and I'll not try to bring my reality, or any other, into the picture.

    271. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by exomondo · · Score: 1

      i never said my comments applied to anything outside of music in any way, shape or form

      Ah. You live in some special fantasy world where "music" is magically protected under something other than "copyright" and is mysteriously different from every other form of copyrightable work.

      No, of course not, and no-one would to come to that conclusion based on anything that i wrote. The fact is in the real world no-one uses EULAs or any derivation thereof to sell music to consumers, the license terms are dictated by copyright law and not by copyright holders.

      Right, I'll leave you to it then. As I have no idea what reality you live in, you're welcome to stay there and I'll not try to bring my reality, or any other, into the picture.

      I'm afraid you are the one out of touch with reality, as has been clearly and comprehensively demonstrated throughout the discussion in the ignorance of your posts.

    272. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by _0xd0ad · · Score: 1

      The fact is in the real world no-one uses EULAs or any derivation thereof to sell music to consumers

      Sure they do. Here's one.

      the license terms are dictated by copyright law and not by copyright holders

      The license terms are dictated by both. If the copyright holders wanted to stipulate additional terms, they could.

      Also, you're an idiot. You keep claiming that your argument only applies to music, but then you refer to "copyright owner", "copyright law" and "copyright holders". Music is not some special category of copyrighted work that gets treated differently, as I've pointed out a few times now. Your claims about "copyright" in general might happen to be generally accurate if "copyright" only applies to music, but in reality it happens to not. What's more, even if they are generally accurate about music, they are only coincidentally so because of the music industry's typical licensing practice.

    273. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by exomondo · · Score: 1

      The fact is in the real world no-one uses EULAs or any derivation thereof to sell music to consumers

      Sure they do. Here's one.

      Have you actually read that? They aren't selling you a license at all.

      Also, you're an idiot. You keep claiming that your argument only applies to music, but then you refer to "copyright owner", "copyright law" and "copyright holders". Music is not some special category of copyrighted work that gets treated differently, as I've pointed out a few times now.

      Just because it applies to music in the confines of copyright law doesn't mean it applies to everything covered by copyright law. When you buy software it almost always comes with a EULA where the owner stipulates the licensing terms, when you buy music it doesn't come with a EULA and the terms of use are simply those laid out by copyright law.

      Your claims about "copyright" in general might happen to be generally accurate if "copyright" only applies to music, but in reality it happens to not. What's more, even if they are generally accurate about music, they are only coincidentally so because of the music industry's typical licensing practice.

      And that's exactly what im discussing, you can write a contract to dictate the terms of just about anything, but the music industry does not do this unlike say the software industry - also copyright material - that does do this.

    274. Re:As I and many others pointed out yesterday by _0xd0ad · · Score: 1

      They aren't selling you a license at all.

      They're providing a service. They have requirements to which you must agree for them to provide that service. The fact that it's free is irrelevant. That is the entire basis of a license: you do these things and/or you don't do these other things, and we'll license you to use this.

      Terms of Service, End-user License Agreement, contract, terms, license... they're all approximately the same thing if they're regulating your access to copyrighted material. Quoting: "You can't use Pandora to steal music, and you have to listen to it through pandora.com or on a device officially supported by Pandora". In other words, it's not your music; it's their music, and to listen to it, you'll play by their rules.

      When you buy software it almost always comes with a EULA where the owner stipulates the licensing terms, when you buy music it doesn't come with a EULA and the terms of use are simply those laid out by copyright law. ... you can write a contract to dictate the terms of just about anything, but the music industry does not do this unlike say the software industry - also copyright material - that does do this.

      Only coincidentally: the music industry has chosen to take that approach. There's really no reason for them to have to. The law doesn't care what licensing the music industry chooses to sell. In choosing to sell it under that license, they have dictated what terms you will have, as I have said many times now.

      If it just so happened to be the other way round - if the music industry sold music only under written contracts and software was sold under the default provisions of copyright law - would we be having the opposite argument?

  2. Ssssshhhhh! by GameboyRMH · · Score: 4, Funny

    Do I need a license to stream MP3s from system RAM to the MP3 player? From my Hard Drive to RAM? From my File Server to my machine?

    Don't give them any ideas!

    --
    "When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
    1. Re:Ssssshhhhh! by rufty_tufty · · Score: 4, Informative

      Considering I remember a time when big music was trying to make MP3s illegal because they could be played indefinitely and not wear out as any other media would, then yes they tried to do that one already.
      Fortunately they lost on that occasion.

      --
      "The weirdest thing about a mind, is that every answer that you find, is the basis of a brand new cliche" -
    2. Re:Ssssshhhhh! by Ritchie70 · · Score: 1

      Well, yes, you do need a license.

      Fortunately, you got it when you bought the music in the first place.

      --
      The preferred solution is to not have a problem.
    3. Re:Ssssshhhhh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      None of that is music - it's not until the data is converted into an audio stream that they have any hold over it.
      Until then, it's just *your* data being piped, filtered, moved, streamed, whatever. Data isn't music, until it's converted into analog sound waves.

    4. Re:Ssssshhhhh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do I need a license to stream MP3s from system RAM to the MP3 player? From my Hard Drive to RAM? From my File Server to my machine?

      Congress had to pass a law in the early 1980s to exempt from copyright law enforcement the copying of works from disk to ram. Copying from your file server is probably not covered by that exemption, but the riaa will have a hard time discovering infringements.

    5. Re:Ssssshhhhh! by Homburg · · Score: 1

      People keep saying this, and it keeps not being true. You do not need a license to make copies of works subject to copyright in the course of non-infringing use. Copying an MP3 from a hard drive to RAM is not something the copyright holder can forbid, thus not something you need a license for.

    6. Re:Ssssshhhhh! by somersault · · Score: 1

      That's a very philosophical argument, that I doubt would hold up in court.

      Otherwise you could just add slight reverb filters or something to playback of a pirated MP3 and it wouldn't count as copyright infringement any more.

      --
      which is totally what she said
    7. Re:Ssssshhhhh! by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 1

      Do I need a license to stream MP3s from system RAM to the MP3 player? From my Hard Drive to RAM? From my File Server to my machine?

      Don't give them any ideas!

      There is only one bright side the the above nightmare scenario: Since every time your system move a song, or part one one, between RAM and swap would count as a horrid, horrid copyright infringement at 150k a pop, it should be comparatively easy to convince Legal that upgrading your workstation to 256GB of RAM is money well spent...

    8. Re:Ssssshhhhh! by Blue+Stone · · Score: 1

      I hear some of the e-book publishers are still trying a variation on this theme

      http://ilmk.wordpress.com/2011/02/28/harpercollins-limits-public-library-check-outs/

      --
      Corporation, n. An ingenious device for obtaining individual profit without individual responsibility. - Ambrose Bierce
    9. Re:Ssssshhhhh! by LoganDzwon · · Score: 1

      The keywords in your sentence are "non-infringing use." See apple vs. Pystar case for what happens if your use is found to be infringing. (In summary, your copy from hard drive to RAM is an illegal copyright infringement.)

    10. Re:Ssssshhhhh! by anyGould · · Score: 2

      I hear some of the e-book publishers are still trying a variation on this theme

      http://ilmk.wordpress.com/2011/02/28/harpercollins-limits-public-library-check-outs/

      I'll try to dig up the link later, but the libraries (and the e-book vendors they use) simply stopped carrying Harper-Collins books in response.

      HC will lose out because they set their "wear out" number so insultingly low - 26 checkouts is *nothing* for a physical book. (One library actually showed video of their books with notes showing how many times it had been checked out - 26 might as well be new.)

      And librarians tend to have a very strong stubborn stream when it comes to accessibility - they'll happily tell Harper Collins where they can shove their "limited checkout ebooks".

    11. Re:Ssssshhhhh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I seem to remember RIAA lawyers claiming that the copy of the MP3 in RAM was an illegal copy of the file stored on you hard drive.

    12. Re:Ssssshhhhh! by somersault · · Score: 1

      Damnit man, now what am I going to do with these Beatles songs that I've been converting into pig latin?! Uckfay ymay ifelay!

      --
      which is totally what she said
    13. Re:Ssssshhhhh! by fuzzyfuzzyfungus · · Score: 1

      The "Derivative work" argument might actually be open for some rather novel abuse, depending on how much patience for bullshit the judge has.

      Ripping a CD, for instance, into any lossy-compressed format is arguably creating a derivative work(albeit one that tries as hard as possible within the bandwidth limits to sound like the original). One could argue that even if "place shifting" or individual backup copies are legal, lossy-compressed versions are not copies but derivative works.

      If one felt particularly nasty, one could even try to assert that (since different devices have different playback characteristics) playback on any device with less than perfect fidelity is the creation of a derivative work, and unauthorized unless licensed(the labels would ever so graciously grant you the license to produce up to (2) such derivative works; but no more...)

    14. Re:Ssssshhhhh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even if they'd won, it wouldn't have stifled the creation of a comparable encoding scheme for long. The information cat is out of the bag. If big media won't come up with it, someone who has time on their hands and a little creativity will.

      I find it amusing that any kid with a computer and a little curiosity, can in theory, cause a giant Corporations millions upon millions of perceived damage over an intellectual distinction, rather than something physical. Warms the heart!

      It's not that I'm anti-corporate, I'm anti-leverage.

    15. Re:Ssssshhhhh! by HermMunster · · Score: 1

      You are confusing moving data from one media to another with moving data from one person to another. The latter is known as distribution, the former is not, not even infringement. Not that I'm claiming you are in the outfield, I'm pointing out the difference between criminal distribution and fair use.

      --
      You can lead a man with reason but you can't make him think.
  3. MAFIAA's answers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Do I need a license to stream MP3s from system RAM to the MP3 player?

    YES

    From my Hard Drive to RAM?

    YES

    From my File Server to my machine?

    YES


    All rights are reserved to the MAFIAA. Any usage not anticipated is therefore a crime !

    1. Re:MAFIAA's answers by tepples · · Score: 1
      Anonymous Coward wrote in jest:

      All rights are reserved to the MAFIAA.

      Then what rights do I need to obtain before writing my own songs?

    2. Re:MAFIAA's answers by 0123456 · · Score: 1

      Then what rights do I need to obtain before writing my own songs?

      Didn't they ban that already? Writing your own songs reduces RIAA profits and hence must be illegal.

    3. Re:MAFIAA's answers by SeNtM · · Score: 1

      Didn't they ban that already? Writing your own songs reduces RIAA profits and hence must be illegal.

      No, they banned recording the songs you may have written. Artists aren't allowed to profit off of the recorded works they create...only the companies that record the works are allowed to profit.

      --
      "There ought to be limits to freedom." -George W. Bush
    4. Re:MAFIAA's answers by anyGould · · Score: 1

      Then what rights do I need to obtain before writing my own songs?

      Didn't they ban that already? Writing your own songs reduces RIAA profits and hence must be illegal.

      Not to mention that legally, all melodies have been written, so anything you write will by definition be derivative.

  4. Please make a stink of this one RIAA..... by Immostlyharmless · · Score: 1

    Amazons lawyers will find a friendly, more bribable judge and eat you alive, setting a precedent you don't want set. So please please PLEASE follow up on this one :)

    1. Re:Please make a stink of this one RIAA..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know we're talking about America here, but is there really no way to get the best outcome for the common people without having to resort to bribery!?

    2. Re:Please make a stink of this one RIAA..... by AndrewNeo · · Score: 1

      Not when the other side (the music industry) is the one making the laws.

    3. Re:Please make a stink of this one RIAA..... by elrous0 · · Score: 1

      The average U.S. Congressional campaign today runs several million dollars. In the early 90's, it was less than $500,000. That means that Congressmen today spend almost all their time, election year or not, soliciting campaign contributions and courting donors. They're whores, plain and simple--all of them, Democrat and Republican. If you've got a lot of money, they're yours to buy. If you don't have money--they couldn't care less what you have to say. And a recent Supreme Court ruling (that essentially opened the doors for corporations to give as much money as they want) is just going to make it even worse.

      So yes, in America today it does come down to who has the bribe money. Buy the best lawyers and the judge will give you anything. Don't like the judge? Then you can buy him or the politician who appoints him. Don't like the law? Buy some Congressmen to change it for you.

      --
      SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
    4. Re:Please make a stink of this one RIAA..... by gman003 · · Score: 0

      There's also violence. America is good at that.

    5. Re:Please make a stink of this one RIAA..... by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

      Please don't call it bribery. We prefer "contributions" or "assistance" or "lobbying." Bribery is such an ugly name, and quite honestly, expects or guarantees a specific outcome. With our modern means of revenue innovation, guarantees are not something you should expect.

      --
      Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
    6. Re:Please make a stink of this one RIAA..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, no, America is not good at violence. With the exception of some nasty inner city slums and your mum's vag on a Friday night, America is not violent at all compared to most of the world.

    7. Re:Please make a stink of this one RIAA..... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, because its the Americans that are always rioting and making death threats over what someone said, wrote, or drew.

    8. Re:Please make a stink of this one RIAA..... by HermMunster · · Score: 1

      Or, someone they bought and paid for with her prior employment and probable re-employment after she's either impeached or retires.

      Did it not occur to anyone that the music cartel is using the same tactics that the Church of Scientology uses? First they couldn't get their tax exempt ruling, and only after infiltrating the government agencies getting their parishioners placed in responsible roles did they finally get the tax exempt state. That's what's happen here. Once noticed your eyes are wide open.

      --
      You can lead a man with reason but you can't make him think.
  5. Deep Pockets buy Justice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think that Amazone is big enough to take on the MAFIAA using a large lawyer army.

    I wish them well, and since I bought my girlfriend a Kindle for Christmas I feel like in a small I helped fund this fight.

    Amazon just bought itself alot of customer loyalty. I think I'll cash in some coins for an amazon gift card after work...

    1. Re:Deep Pockets buy Justice by somersault · · Score: 1

      They were already my favourite company. If they pull this off it would be great :)

      Since this service isn't available in the UK yet though, the news surrounding this just reminded me of the existence of Spotify and I've subscribed to it instead. I'm currently listening to the Smashing Pumpkins "Rarities and B-sides" collection that would have cost me £80 to buy on Amazon's MP3 store, and I could never justify the cost considering I have about half the tracks (and you can't buy them individually). Paying a subscription instead of regularly buying albums will save me a loooot of money overall..!

      --
      which is totally what she said
  6. Future by sugarmotor · · Score: 1

    Amazon may be right with respect to music files people presently own.

    But in the future, music files may be sold with clauses addressing "cloud players".

    --
    http://stephan.sugarmotor.org
    1. Re:Future by thetartanavenger · · Score: 1

      But in the future, music files may be sold with clauses addressing "cloud players".

      In that case the music is not being sold. It is not yours to do with how you please so you do not actually own the music. You likely have a drm laden music file that's more hassle than it's worth, and their business model will fail, as it has done time and time again..

      --
      Who need's speling and grammar?
    2. Re:Future by DurendalMac · · Score: 1

      The music isn't being sold regardless. There are ALWAYS licenses, and adding to that license is not going to put DRM on the file. Furthermore, having DRM does not guarantee failure. Last time I checked, Netflix required DRM and they're doing just fine. Tons of commercially successful software incorporates DRM and sells just fine. Overly intrusive or cumbersome DRM can kill a business model. DRM itself does not. Stop looking at what you wish would be and start looking at reality.

      As for Amazon, should they need an additional license to do this? No. Will they? Most likely.

    3. Re:Future by Yvan256 · · Score: 1

      Netflix's business model is renting, not selling. I don't really care if there's DRM on rented media since it's watch once then delete it. Netflix's service is also available on a lot of platforms, that helps a lot. In fact, I think they're the most compatible video service on the market today.

    4. Re:Future by characterZer0 · · Score: 1

      There are ALWAYS licenses

      If I buy a used CD, there is no license.

      --
      Go green: turn off your refrigerator.
    5. Re:Future by Svartalf · · Score: 1

      Heh... You didn't buy anything according to the media companies.

      When the original owner "bought" the CD in question, according to the media industry, they bought a license to the content contained on the CD. When you "bought" it from the reseller, you simply bought the rights that license conferred- you still didn't buy anything, according to them. There's a reason I've not bought much of anything from these *ssholes- part of it is that most of it is pure rubbish, part of it is that they're playing word games to try to keep control of things for their cartel (That's all RIAA and MPAA are...). If it weren't for the First Sale Doctrine, they'd say the license in question's not even transferable.

      --
      I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
    6. Re:Future by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why do people always say crap like this? Who cares what the media companies think? It's the law and reality that matters. There is NO license when you purchase a CD!

    7. Re:Future by DurendalMac · · Score: 1

      Then perhaps license wasn't the correct term in all cases. There are still absurd legal/civil issues, and we've all seen the absurd lengths and arguments the RIAA has made in and out of court. Buying a used CD doesn't mean they can't sue you if you rip it and seed a torrent.

  7. Good question by Old97 · · Score: 2

    The TV content providers are objecting to cable companies streaming their shows to iPads and other "non TV" devices in the home, even though they are being paid for that content. I don't understand their argument, but their logic is unmistakable; they want more money, more money, more money. I hope Amazon wins this thing on very broad grounds. I don't mind paying for content, but once and only once and for any device I own.

    --
    Very often, people confuse simple with simplistic. The nuance is lost on most. - Clement Mok
  8. Amazon by jimmerz28 · · Score: 1

    LEAVE THE MUSIC INDUSTRY ALONE!!!!

    This drama is better than any of the movies released this year thusfar!

  9. Evolving case law by Dachannien · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Amazon now has the benefit of CNN et al. v. CSC Holdings, aka the Cablevision Remote DVR Lawsuit, where the 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in Cablevision's favor and specified that, in part, the specific actions of the remote user instructing the remote DVR to record and play back the copyrighted material served to exclude Cablevision from liability. SCOTUS refused to hear an appeal on this, so other circuits might be inclined to agree with the 2nd Circuit.

    There are probably some differences here (not knowing about the specific functionality of Cloud Player, I won't speculate), so it'll be interesting to see how far Amazon can push the envelope.

    1. Re:Evolving case law by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong circuit :(

      Amazon is 9ths Circuit, and 2nd Circuit decisions would not be considered 'persuasive'.

    2. Re:Evolving case law by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On the other hand, a DVR inherited a lot of the time-shifting jurisprudence established by the betamax case, and I don't see a music file (which wasn't ever broadcast) benefiting in the same way.

    3. Re:Evolving case law by afidel · · Score: 1

      Actually with the SC refusing to hear an appeal and falling under the guidelines of Sony v Universal I would think it would be considered.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    4. Re:Evolving case law by Dachannien · · Score: 1

      It wouldn't be binding, but it would likely be more persuasive. Ninth Circuit might not ultimately go along with it, but they'd almost certainly consider it.

  10. I think ... by PPH · · Score: 1

    ... Amazon is whistling past the graveyard on this one. I hope its not a copyrighted tune.

    --
    Have gnu, will travel.
    1. Re:I think ... by hedwards · · Score: 5, Funny

      I hear that if you say RIAA three times in a row in front of a mirror that the MPAA sues you for copyright infringement.

    2. Re:I think ... by Svartalf · · Score: 1

      ROFLMAO! Thankfully I wasn't drinking anything just now- you'd owe me a monitor and keyboard if I were. Thanks for brightening the day here.

      --
      I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
    3. Re:I think ... by Jason+Levine · · Score: 1

      To misquote Futurama:

      "10000010100000101001001001001010? That's just jibberish."
      (Looks in mirror.)
      "01010010010010010100000101000001?!!! AAAAAHHH!!!!!"
      (Runs from room screaming.)

      --
      My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
    4. Re:I think ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I didn't really get what you say, till I read it out loud three times...

  11. What a stupid article by chaboud · · Score: 2

    The linked article definitely gives the sense that merely being sued by the record companies is deterrent enough, and that "doesn't sound particularly good for Amazon."

    We need to get past the fear-mongering and extorsion of the RIAA and MPAA and remember that we have fair use rights. You are *not* entitled to the success of the business model of your choosing. If your business model is illegal, too bad.

    I'm pleased to no end that we finally have someone as big as Amazon, a company with a proven track record of leveraging a legal advantage (remember one-click?), taking on this fight. It's your music, on your private space, not shared with anyone else. The record companies would have you pay a fee to hum a tune to yourself in your car.

    1. Re:What a stupid article by Daetrin · · Score: 1

      "Amazon, a company with a proven track record of leveraging a legal advantage (remember one-click?)"

      Damn it! You're almost making me want to root for the RIAA! I didn't think that was possible! =P

      --
      This Space Intentionally Left Blank
    2. Re:What a stupid article by chaboud · · Score: 1

      When it comes down to a legal battle, I'm happy to have the people with a proven track record of being clever legal bastards on my side.

      I don't think that Google is evil enough for this fight.

  12. You need a license to sing in the shower! by erroneus · · Score: 4, Informative

    If you ask the RIAA what you need a license for, the short answer is "everything" according to them. They exist because they seek to claim rights to everything possible and expect people not to take the issue to court when they need an exception.

    The RIAA and similar activities are criminal in my opinion as they are extortionists who routinely claim to have rights over materials they do not have rights to. If the RIAA is to persist, the government needs to hand down an exclusive list of what they can claim and the requirements on how to make claims... requirements such as proof the material being litigated over is actually covered by their "watch." Further, I think in order to assert copyright protection, the copyrighted materials should be registered with the library of congress formally and in an unprotected digital format. (They should at least pretend to honor the social bargain of copyright and eventual public domain.)

    1. Re:You need a license to sing in the shower! by Tigger's+Pet · · Score: 1

      It's not just the RIAA. Here in the UK we are covered by the PRS (Performing Right Society), who stick their nose in everywhere it's not wanted as well. We've had issues going on for years - no radios allowed in offices, factories etc unless the company pays for a license from the PRS.

      http://news.bbc.co.uk/newsbeat/hi/the_p_word/newsid_7457000/7457376.stm

      It even got to the state where taxi drivers were being threatened with legal action for having a radio on if their passengers could hear the radio - how damn stupid is that. So, the taxi driver could listen to the radio on the way to pick up a fare but, once they had picked them up, had to turn off the radio until they dropped them off again.

    2. Re:You need a license to sing in the shower! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yet, for some reason I can't fathom, people keep giving them assloads of money.

      It isn't like there's some great mystery calling their sleaze into question. So why are people still shoveling money in their direction all the time?

    3. Re:You need a license to sing in the shower! by erroneus · · Score: 1

      More of the same -- some places definitely have it worse than in the USA. But on your radio, are there commercial advertisements? Also, do the radio stations pay to play the content over the radio?

      In effect, radio stations have already paid the fee needed to perform the content. Advertisers pay to have their stuff aired with the content. The PRS is actually lowering the value of the air-time given to advertisers by interfering with the audience. So advertisers and radio stations should be up in arms about this practice in a very serious way. This is the primary reason I don't think it would happen in the US -- TV/Radio are bigger business as are advertisers and their money speaks at least as loud as the RIAA's.

    4. Re:You need a license to sing in the shower! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you ask the RIAA what you need a license for, the short answer is "everything" according to them. They exist because they seek to claim rights to everything possible and expect people not to take the issue to court when they need an exception.

      The RIAA and similar activities are criminal in my opinion as they are extortionists who routinely claim to have rights over materials they do not have rights to. If the RIAA is to persist, the government needs to hand down an exclusive list of what they can claim and the requirements on how to make claims... requirements such as proof the material being litigated over is actually covered by their "watch." Further, I think in order to assert copyright protection, the copyrighted materials should be registered with the library of congress formally and in an unprotected digital format. (They should at least pretend to honor the social bargain of copyright and eventual public domain.)

      Very funny story... Several decades ago, RIAA (or whatever it was in the early 80s) went after the Boy/Girl scouts of america for singing songs at campfires etc

      The girl scouts bought a license from RIAA, the boy scouts asked for a list of ALL songs that they held copyright on. That way the boy scouts would have a list of songs that they couldn't sing. RIAA was responsible for distributing this list to every summer camp in the country.

      Needless to say - they didn't provide the list (many millions of dollars - no return) and the case went away.

      I remember laughing very hard when it was going on

    5. Re:You need a license to sing in the shower! by erroneus · · Score: 1

      I would really love to see a link or two to that. Not doubting it, but would like something I can reference later. It's a story worth telling and retelling... and it wouldn't hurt if it were accurately told.

    6. Re:You need a license to sing in the shower! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think BMI and ASCAP licenses can be had for like less than $100 / year and give you the "rights" to about everything. Seems reasonable.

    7. Re:You need a license to sing in the shower! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      If you ask the RIAA what you need a license for, the short answer is "everything" according to them. They exist because they seek to claim rights to everything possible and expect people not to take the issue to court when they need an exception.

      You know, I've often wondered why the RIAA never objected to those "headphone splitters" you can buy that allow you to connect a 2nd headphone to a personal listening device. I mean, come on, it's totally obvious that the sole purpose of those splitters is to let a second, unauthorized listener gain access to the same copyrighted intellectual property as the authorized licensee. I don't buy into that "backup connector" argument for one second.

  13. Why that case should have failed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why that case should have failed: that digital copy was necessary to use the product. A copy required in the normal use of a copyrighted work is not covered by copyright.

    PS in both cases, you've "bought a license", therefore that license either exists or doesn't. Since the digital recording is not the thing you bought, neither case has something that you lose money over.

    1. Re:Why that case should have failed. by hedwards · · Score: 5, Informative

      You didn't buy a license you bought a copy. CDs do not come with EULAs or ToS that dictate otherwise and I've never opened a jewel case and found such an agreement. Admittedly, it's been years since I bought anything from a major studio, but I doubt that much has changed.

      Consequently, if that's how they view it and expect it to be treated, they'd be liable for all sorts of false advertising and fraud suits.

    2. Re:Why that case should have failed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "A copy required in the normal use of a copyrighted work is not covered by copyright."

      It's not technically that broad, unfortunately. There is a specific exception for computer programs - for the fleeting copies required to run them - but songs are not programs. Perhaps there is case law on format shifting? If so, that would be more to the point. But it's not just sitting there in the text of the Act.

    3. Re:Why that case should have failed. by TheoMurpse · · Score: 2

      Honestly, by and large, I cannot parse a thesis out of your post to respond to. That being said, there are a couple things in it that, if I understand them correctly, are used erroneously to form some sort of "MP3.com should have been considered legal" thesis.

      in both cases, you've "bought a license", therefore that license either exists or doesn't

      Yes, but there is little doubt you're infringing copyright by uploading a copy of a song to Amazon (or ripping it off your CD or anything). However, there is this nice affirmative defense called "fair use." The factors of fair use come out differently when applied to the two systems at issue.

      Why that case should have failed: that digital copy was necessary to use the product. A copy required in the normal use of a copyrighted work is not covered by copyright.

      The snag is that not everything can be considered a "normal use." I do come down on the side of space shifting (which is basically what this service is) being fair use, but you're making a conclusory statement when you say copying your music to another "person's" hard drive across the globe is "normal" use. You need to defend it, and that's precisely what is going to be at issue if this went to court.

      But it probably won't go to court; Amazon and Google will settle out of court like Google did with the books issue. They'll pay some kind of license to the recording industry because it's cheaper than litigating the issue. It'll take a small company (that can't afford to—or is not willing to—settle) offering a similar service and a talented group of cause lawyers (like the EFF) to get the ruling at the SCOTUS level.

    4. Re:Why that case should have failed. by BronsCon · · Score: 1

      According to Napster (current day Napster, that is) you are buying an "Ownership License". They used this argument to deny me a refund after I bought a single track, then later bought the album that single track came from; note that albums are sold at a discount when compared to the sum total of the price of their individual tracks. They ended up giving me the refund when I pointed out that if I had "Ownership", I wouldn't need their "License"; once they realized I knew they were talking out of their asses and I could see through their bullshit, they dropped the act and refunded me my $0.99, responsibly eating the $0.62 for which they're "financially responsible to the copyright holder for [my] purchase" as cost of doing business, to keep a customer.

      I strongly suggested to them that they implement a system that reviews prior purchases and if a user attempts to buy the same track (same version from the same album) twice, either by buying the single twice or by buying the single and later buying the album, alert them that they already own the track before completing the purchase. In the case of a single, the user would have the option to remove the track from their cart or keep it in the cart (e.g. to replace a lost or deleted copy). In the case of an album, the user would have the option to receive credit for tracks already owned (and no further copies of those tracks will be provided with the album) or to receive an additional (or replacement) copy of those tracks.

      I'm not sure if they've implemented this, but I was told it would be considered. I'm pretty sure they considered it long enough to reach for the delete key, but I made my case and I think it's a pretty fucking valid one.

      --
      APK quotes people (including myself) without context and should not be trusted. Just thought you should know.
    5. Re:Why that case should have failed. by brit74 · · Score: 1

      Whether it was a "license" or a "copy", it's still subject to copyright law. Afterall, when you buy a copy, you still have limited rights to what you're allowed to do with it - e.g. you can't make a thousand copies and sell them in stores or on the street, even though it's "yours". Effectively, copyright is in some ways like a license, even if you saw no EULA.

    6. Re:Why that case should have failed. by omnichad · · Score: 1

      Plus settling out of court doesn't set a legal precedent - meaning that everyone's afraid to start a competing service and still face litigation.

    7. Re:Why that case should have failed. by DriedClexler · · Score: 1

      It was on the back -- the part where it says "Copyright such-and-such year such-and-such company". You know, the notice that everyone knows is there and everyone understands the meaning of when they're not feigning ignorance.

      --
      Information theory is life. The rest is just the KL divergence.
  14. New Napster by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Basically Amazon re-invented Napster.

  15. Google and Apple should join by slb · · Score: 1

    Please Google and Apple, join Amazon and explain to the 4 greedy bastards and the MAFIAA that a music file does not need a specific license to be streamed once it has been bought.

    --
    http://www.transparency.org
    1. Re:Google and Apple should join by Colonel+Korn · · Score: 1

      Please Google and Apple, join Amazon and explain to the 4 greedy bastards and the MAFIAA that a music file does not need a specific license to be streamed once it has been bought.

      Seriously. Amazon on its own has much larger revenue and profits than the entire music industry, but if you add Google and Apple (and let's get MS in there, too) you can field a million-lawyer army to ensure success. This is one case where the American "if you're richer, you'll probably win" court system may work to the benefit of normal people.

      --
      "I zero-index my hamsters" - Willtor (147206)
    2. Re:Google and Apple should join by gnasher719 · · Score: 1

      Seriously. Amazon on its own has much larger revenue and profits than the entire music industry, but if you add Google and Apple (and let's get MS in there, too) you can field a million-lawyer army to ensure success. This is one case where the American "if you're richer, you'll probably win" court system may work to the benefit of normal people.

      Between them they could buy out the complete music industry easily. However, that would be more of interest to Apple and Google, who want to sell devices and advertisements (wouldn't you want an iPod that comes with _all_ music? ). In the courts, there is a point where having more money doesn't make a difference. Look at what SCO got for $50 million. (And if they didn't win, then that is because even $50 million lawyers can't win when you've got nothing, but they can sure keep IBM and Novell in the court system for years. $100 million wouldn't have bought better lawyers).

      Personally, I think what Amazon is doing is very, very, very risky. Risk = amount of possible damage times probability of possible damage. If there are two million different songs uploaded, then the maximum possible damage is two million times $150,000 or bankruptcy for Amazon. I don't think the probability of losing is high, but it is not zero.

    3. Re:Google and Apple should join by guruevi · · Score: 1

      Too bad the RIAA is not a publicly traded business or somebody could just do a hostile takeover of the organization, gut it and leave it to die. Maybe Apple will buy one of the smaller media conglomerates out one of these days.

      --
      Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
  16. Fallacy by rebot777 · · Score: 2

    Do I need a license to stream MP3s from system RAM to the MP3 player? From my Hard Drive to RAM? From my File Server to my machine?

    From one party to another? They might have legal footing but not based on that logic.

  17. myplay.com did this in 1999 with no legal issues by szyzyg · · Score: 2

    Yes, before mp3.com launched their my.mp3.com service which was declared illegal.

    Myplay tried to get the record industry interested in downloads, but they couldn't get any interest from the majors, the best they could do was their online storage service and DMCA compliant user tailored radio streams. No flash in those days either, you needed to configure winamp or some other external player to actually stream the content.

    myplay never had any legal issues, they simply didn't have enough money to maintain such a service back when terabytes of disk space were only available in refrigerator sized racks of disks, and when most people were still on modem connections.

  18. But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There's no reason for it to be "known" at all what you're streaming, or who to, if you're the one who put it up there. It should be an encrypted stream of data that cannot be accessed by Amazon or coerced out by any third-party.

  19. Where does playback start and other questions... by acedotcom · · Score: 1

    So, i guess these are the questions... 1. If you are streaming your music to a device that belongs to you does that count as broadcasting?
    2. Does your "personal" license to music allow to remotely broadcast music to a device even if you are the only one that can access it?
    3. If you are considered to be broadcasting, shouldnt this effect other devices such as sling box? (im pretty sure rebroadcasting sport events is pretty much frowned upon)
    4. Does this mean that uploading any music to a personal server makes you a "broadcaster", even if you are the only one that can access the stream? Am i a broadcaster if i email a song to myself for easy access?
    5. Where does playback start? Does it start when i select the songs from my server that i want to hear or does in start inside of my device?

    of course, i take all this with a grain of salt. i have been streaming music from one computer to another for years. as far as i am concerned, this is no different then having a radio in one room and speaker in another. the fact that anyone feel that they deserve "their fair share" when they arent having to invest in the innovation is offensive to me.

    --
    they say it is often more relevant then the comment above, all we know is its called the Sig!
  20. IANAL, but by Mr.Intel · · Score: 1

    If I was one and I worked in Amazon's legal department, I would say something like the following:

    If you do this, you will be sued, regardless of the legality of your actions.

    --
    ASCII tastes bad dude.
    Binary it is then.
    1. Re:IANAL, but by delinear · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure they're doing this knowing full well that they will be sued. They must also feel that they have a pretty strong case or they wouldn't be exploring the idea. If money buys laws then Amazon should be able to at least afford a nice juicy exemption.

    2. Re:IANAL, but by Svartalf · · Score: 1

      Sometimes, one should stand up for the legality of something regardless of whether you'll get sued for the action or not. It's because of being adverse to being sued in court that many, many wrong things have come to pass in this country.

      --
      I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
    3. Re:IANAL, but by wvmarle · · Score: 1

      Sounds like "job security!" to me.

  21. Where's the lawsuit? by Seumas · · Score: 1

    The limewire guys are pinned for $75,000,000,000,000.00 -- so I'm eager to see the RIAA attempt a, say, $150,000,000,000,000.00 lawsuit against Amazon.

    1. Re:Where's the lawsuit? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      $75 trillion? That seems a bit excessive. Are we just adding random amounts of zeros?

    2. Re:Where's the lawsuit? by jpapon · · Score: 1

      Nope, that's the correct number.

      --
      -- Let us endeavor so to live that when we pass even the undertaker shall be sorry. -- M. Twain
    3. Re:Where's the lawsuit? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, they are not "pinned." The judge already ruled that amount was absurd.

  22. Do I need a license to stream MP3s? by itsdapead · · Score: 1

    Do I need a license to stream MP3s from system RAM to the MP3 player?

    Outside the US, that depends on your country's provisions for fair use (one area in which the US seems relatively enlightened). In the UK, if you ripped a CD then you've infringed even before you get round to streaming (although that's never enforced - but if you bring a third party into the process, who knows?)

    However, the question is, if you let Amazon stream your files, is it still personal use (bear in mind, Amazon are not ar charity, so they'll have a cunning plan to make some money out of it somehow)? For instance, this snippit from the Amazon Cloud T&C recently turned up on Groklaw:

    5.2 Our Right to Access Your Files. You give us the right to access, retain, use and disclose your account information and Your Files...

    Do you think you have the right to sub-license your Lady Gaga collection to Amazon?

    Disclaimer - I'm not saying that it should be stopped. Who knows, maybe Amazon will force copyright laws to be updated to sensibly cover technologies invented since the player piano?

    --
    In a survey of 100 programmers, 111111 thought that duck-typing was a good idea.
    1. Re:Do I need a license to stream MP3s? by wvmarle · · Score: 1

      Some countries had to amend copyright laws in the early era of computing.

      After all, installing software from floppy disk onto your hard disk means making a copy of the software. And that was illegal under the law, which stated no copies allowed.

    2. Re:Do I need a license to stream MP3s? by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      bear in mind, Amazon are not ar charity, so they'll have a cunning plan to make some money out of it somehow

      The cunning plan seems to be simple and straightforward: you have to pay for extra storage to upload your own files, but if you buy tracks from Amazon, they're stored for free. Thus, they let you upload your existing collection for free (and even then up to a certain limit, after which you pay) so that you start using the service today, and then perhaps in a month, then you'll be buying some new release, you'll go to Amazon MP3 over iTMS simply because that's what you use more, and because you want to store the download in the cloud but don't want to pay extra.

  23. Duck and cover Amazon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And the big four haven't said a thing about this, the calm before the record industry sh*tstorm.

  24. it's different by sribe · · Score: 3, Insightful

    And in many ways this is even worse. MP3.com at least required you to prove you actually owned a disc before you could stream it.

    Ah, but MP3.com ripped the disks and provided the copy to you, which is actually a pretty clear contradiction of copyright law (though perfectly ethical). Amazon is just storing and transmitting data that you provide. I don't know of anything in the law that would restrict this.

    1. Re:it's different by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

      What if you buy it from Amazon and they upload it directly to your storage for you?

      What if they then use deduplication across their servers to save space, and all the people who bought the same track is really stored just once? What about the people you "loaned" those MP3s to who also decided to upload them to Amazons service? Now they could be serving infringing copies from their deduplicated master file.

      --
      Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
    2. Re:it's different by gregor-e · · Score: 1

      Another way of viewing it was that MP3.com was merely housing the dictionary part of your extremely well-compressed files. When you scanned your CD, it compressed all of that data into a dictionary key. This dictionary key could then be decompressed by MP3.com, where the dictionary part of your compressed file was stored. Without your part of the compressed file, MP3.com couldn't decompress it for you.

    3. Re:it's different by Svartalf · · Score: 1

      In your example, if you use the "licensing" thoughts that RIAA seems so fond to point out on things like downloads and CD's, then we can arrive at the following conclusions:

      - You bought a license to an instance of that music in the format Amazon provided to you.
      - They HAVE a license from the media companies to do this act.
      - As long as they provide it to your account for download and only to it, they're free and clear if you're giving more people access (That's YOUR infringement, not theirs and they're not really "enabling" it either...)
      - As long as they don't provide copies that were not submitted to their cloud by subscribers or from purchasers of the media from their sales end, they're in the clear as long as they can prove that fact.
      - Those copies you "loaned" to someone else are YOUR infringements or Fair Use copies depending on how they were obtained (American Home Recording Act...)- NOT Amazon's problem at all.

      De-duplication doesn't change any of the statuses there. Amazon's got a license to provide the MP3's to begin with and can show YOU bought it, then they're pretty much in the clear on their part. This doesn't mean that RIAA or it's members won't try to run your argument up the flagpole, but...it's still not quite what you're thinking it is.

      --
      I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
    4. Re:it's different by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, but then you don't count the RIAA!

      If it is potentially possible to play the data in a music player, and it potentially can sound like works which they pretend to force copyright over, they will sue you. They will also probably sue every user since this platform allows them to do something illegal.

      This is their normal way of behavior. And since they have now gotten one of their people in as judge, don't expect anyone to get away with "probably piracy"... I am just glad I don't reside in the US and thus can't be sued that directly for owning a computer with an optical drive...

  25. Some restrictions apply ... by davide+marney · · Score: 4, Informative

    From the Amazon MP3 Uploader App Help page:

    Files not supported by the Uploader

    • DRM (Digital Rights Managed) files: DRM protects the number and types of locations that songs can be played from. Because of these restrictions the Amazon MP3 Uploader and Amazon Cloud Player do not support these file types.
    • Non-MP3 and non-AAC formats: The Amazon MP3 Uploader and Amazon Cloud Player only support a select number of file formats. See below for a complete list of formats we support and a list of some of the files formats that we do not. To find out how to convert music into a file format we support, use your preferred media player.
    • Over 100 MB: Uploading files that are over 100 MB in size is currently not supported. If you have music files of this size that you would like to add to Cloud Player we recommend you re-encode them at a lower bit rate to reduce the file size. To find out how to convert music into a file format we support, use your preferred media player.
    • Miscellaneous audio types: Ringtones, podcasts, audio books, and other non-music audio files are not supported by the Amazon MP3 Uploader.
    • Playlist without eligible music: Playlists that contain only files with any of the above problems or that contain no music are not eligible for Upload.
      The following is a list of supported file formats and some of the unsupported file formats. Unsupported files will not show up in the Uploader as they are not available for upload.

    Supported file formats

    • .mp3 -- Standard non-DRM file format (Includes Amazon MP3 Store purchased files)
    • .m4a -- AAC files (Includes iTunes store purchased files)

    Unsupported file formats

    • .wma -- Windows Media Audio files
    • .m4p -- DRM AAC files
    • .wav -- Uncompressed music files
    • .ac3 -- Dolby Digital audio files
    • .ogg -- Ogg Vorbis audio files
    • .ape -- Lossless Monkey audio files
    • .flac -- Free Lossless Audio Codec files

    It will be interesting to see how well Amazon stands up to the inevitable court challenges. For music purchased from AmazonMP3, they are certainly on very solid ground, since they can prove that the Cloud Drive user is the purchaser; if Amazon has the legal right to download you the MP3 you just bought, they certainly have the right to download it for you again. The music industry has already taken their (very generous) cut in that case. You paid for it, you get to use it.

    Playing back non-AmazonMP3 files is where I think it gets a little sticky.

    --
    "We receive as friendly that which agrees with, we resist with dislike that which opposes us" - Faraday
    1. Re:Some restrictions apply ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Unsupported file formats

      If they're just storing the bits and then giving them back to you later, why would it matter? Shouldn't it just depend on the formats supported by the device you're going to stream from? My computer supports most of those "unsupported" formats out of the box, so why couldn't I use them with this service?

      I never understand why there are so many artificial restrictions on everything these days.

    2. Re:Some restrictions apply ... by wvmarle · · Score: 1

      They got the meaning of DRM wrong. As usual. The R stands for Restrictions. Here another of those restrictions becomes apparent. No rights involved.

    3. Re:Some restrictions apply ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Playing back non-AmazonMP3 files is where I think it gets a little sticky.

      It's not like the person who uploaded that file to Amazon didn't already *have* that file. Can't think of any car analogies right now, but it's possible to steal a bag of coins and deposit it into a bank account, then withdraw it from that account again. From the perspective of the bank it's just money. It's not their responsibility to track down each penny to its origin, nor could they reasonably be expected to do so. Likewise Amazon won't be able to track down where each file originally came from, unless they were dupes from files watermarked by them. I'd recommend against uploading any pirated audio to Amazon, though- it might backfire.

    4. Re:Some restrictions apply ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Miscellaneous audio types: Ringtones, podcasts, audio books, and other non-music audio files are not supported by the Amazon MP3 Uploader.

      I can understand they will block mono 32kbps files but what if you encode your audio book CDs to 128k/44.1/stereo? Audio Books is especially one thing you'd want to stream using this service (assuming you can listen on one device, then seamlessly continue where you left off on another, if that player app is worth anything).

    5. Re:Some restrictions apply ... by PipsqueakOnAP133 · · Score: 1

      Not an arbitrary artificial restriction. It's because not all versions of Amazon Cloud Player support those formats, as in doesn't include codecs for them.

      Say, if you uploaded music as FLAC and it plays on your desktop, but not your Android phone, then you might be kinda pissed. You'd also be kinda pissed that your data plan ran your bank account out of funds for streaming FLAC, but that's a different problem.

    6. Re:Some restrictions apply ... by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Note that these are only the restrictions on the separate, out-of-browser uploader app that is there to simplify uploading of existing organized music collections. You can download pretty much anything if you use the browser-based interface; the only limit seems to be max 2Gb file size.

      Of course, you won't be able to stream uploaded .ogg or .flac files - at least, not using the Amazon-provided player.

    7. Re:Some restrictions apply ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      DropBox allows you to put your data up there and stream music from it. I don't see how this is any different.

    8. Re:Some restrictions apply ... by VisceralLogic · · Score: 1

      ...

      Miscellaneous audio types: Ringtones, podcasts, audio books, and other non-music audio files are not supported by the Amazon MP3 Uploader.

      ...

      Interesting... how do they know whether any given MP3/AAC file is a ringtone, podcast, audio book, or other non-music audio file?

      --
      Stop! Dremel time!
  26. If they were smart, they'd work with Amazon by MikeRT · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The music industry's official distribution channels have come down to Target, Walmart, Apple and Amazon for most of their sales. I suppose there's "FYE," but I can't remember the last time I was in one.

    Of those four, Amazon is probably the least evil in terms of what it does to suppliers. Walmart in particular is legendary for cackling like the wicked witch as it tightens the vice around its suppliers' nuts just for shits and giggles. Apple is not as bad, but is run by a man who wouldn't hesitate to make an example of a record label that screwed with it in a way that they deemed "unacceptable."

    Really, Amazon is a big stick with which they can beat both Apple and Walmart if they play their cards right. Which is about as likely as the RIAA's executive suing Congress over the DMCA calling DRM an unconstitutional and "socialistic" restraint of trade.

    1. Re:If they were smart, they'd work with Amazon by Mongoose+Disciple · · Score: 2

      I was waiting for someone to make this point.

      Unlike all the filesharing and other streaming outfits, the RIAA has something to lose in a fight with Amazon. Specifically, money they're making through Amazon right now.

      I'm not saying they're not stupid, crazy, or willful enough to get a lawsuit going anyway, but unlike basically all the other cases they have the only incentive that matters, money, to think twice about how they approach Amazon instead of just trying to rabidly crush them.

    2. Re:If they were smart, they'd work with Amazon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      If they were smart they would have done this themselves a long time ago. They have repeatedly and clearly proven over the last decade(s) that they are not smart.

    3. Re:If they were smart, they'd work with Amazon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apple is not as bad, but is run by a man who wouldn't hesitate to make an example of a record label that screwed with it in a way that they deemed "unacceptable."

      Wait... this sounds like a good thing? /Someone/ needs to slap the records labels around a bit.

  27. Re:Where does playback start and other questions.. by gman003 · · Score: 1

    I don't think it would be "broadcasting". Maybe "narrowcasting" is a better term - it's going to a small, determinable amount of endpoints, not to anything that happens to be listening in.

  28. Dropbox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is no different than me paying a monthly fee to have an online external drive.

    I can upload whatever I want, and they are just offering a nice flash media player that streams the music I uploaded.

  29. Ammendment - full Amazon quote by itsdapead · · Score: 1

    Sorry, I just re-read the post and decided that the way I "snipped" the Amazon quote (unintentionally) put a bit of a slant on it. The full quote is

    5.2 Our Right to Access Your Files. You give us the right to access, retain, use and disclose your account information and Your Files: to provide you with technical support and address technical issues; to investigate compliance with the terms of this Agreement, enforce the terms of this Agreement and protect the Service and its users from fraud or security threats; or as we determine is necessary to provide the Service or comply with applicable law.

    I don't think that alters my point that they are asking you to grant them rights to IP that you don't own, but Amazon clearly aren't proposing to party down to "your" music!

    --
    In a survey of 100 programmers, 111111 thought that duck-typing was a good idea.
  30. When do we get this treatment for our ebooks? by Frozen-Solid · · Score: 2

    Amazon has shown several times now that they're willing to go toe to toe with the RIAA. They had DRM free music before that was the standard, and now they're pushing for cloud storage and streaming. Everything they're doing in regards to the music industry is pro-user and pro-consumer. So what about the Kindle? Why do they bend over backwards at every turn to please the book publishing industry and continue to DRM protect their eBooks? Why is it that they didn't fight the publishing industry on the Text-to-Speech feature? Why aren't they fighting for the consumer's right to lend books to their friends? Amazon is only fighting for the consumer on the MP3 issue because they have nothing to lose. They're a small time player in digital music services and they want to make a mark. If they get shut down, they're no worse off than they are now, but if it takes off they have a chance to be the first out of the door with a HUGE service. I'm becoming less and less confident we'll ever see Amazon fight for the consumer when it relates to the Kindle.

    --
    Frozen Insanity
    http://frozen-solid.net
    1. Re:When do we get this treatment for our ebooks? by gnasher719 · · Score: 2

      Amazon has shown several times now that they're willing to go toe to toe with the RIAA. They had DRM free music before that was the standard, and now they're pushing for cloud storage and streaming. Everything they're doing in regards to the music industry is pro-user and pro-consumer.

      Amazon didn't get DRM free music because they were pro-consumer, but because the RIAA gave it to Amazon to have something to blackmail Apple with. Apple wanted DRM free music and same (low) prices for everything. Because the record companies gave DRM-free music to Amazon, but not Apple, Apple was forced to give in which is why you pay lower price for garbage, normal price for anything that is not garbage, and extra high price for everything you actually want to listen to.

    2. Re:When do we get this treatment for our ebooks? by McKing · · Score: 1

      Small-time player in digital music? They're about the biggest that there is, with the exception of Apple's iTunes store.

      I agree with the Kindle thing. The problem is the e-books are like crack. It's way too easy to finish a book and say, "well, I could go to Half-Price Books tomorrow and get the next one in the series, or I could just get it instantly from the Kindle Store".

      --
      If only "common" sense was actually that common...
    3. Re:When do we get this treatment for our ebooks? by Frozen-Solid · · Score: 1

      You're completely wrong. When Amazon MP3 started iTunes was JUST beginning to offer DRM-free music for $1.29 when their normal, shitty quality DRMcrap was $0.99. Amazon bargained for a far better deal to offer high quality VBR mp3s for $0.99 without any DRM. Apple wasn't forced to give in, Apple was forced to keep up with Amazon's higher quality for lower prices. Amazon is the company that made DRM-free the standard, and it wasn't until MONTHS later that Apple dropped the double pricing system and went purely DRM-free... and yet they're STILL mostly $1.29 per song.

      --
      Frozen Insanity
      http://frozen-solid.net
    4. Re:When do we get this treatment for our ebooks? by Duradin · · Score: 1

      And they say Steve Jobs has a reality distortion field...

    5. Re:When do we get this treatment for our ebooks? by Frozen-Solid · · Score: 1

      Small as far as market share goes. iTunes, as of Dec 2010, had 66% of the total digital music market share. Amazon has 13%. If Amazon wants to cut into Apple's digital music sales they have to do something drastic. Source: http://www.bgr.com/2010/12/17/itunes-now-holds-66-of-digital-music-market/ Kindle is something like 75-80% of the market share. Amazon OWNS that market. It's their's and they have no reason to rock the boat. Even the iPad and iBooks isn't enough to scare them into taking action yet. http://www.teleread.com/ebooks/amazon-has-76-of-e-book-market-survey-reports/ It's frustrating to watch Amazon push hard against the RIAA, and blindly accept anything the book industry shoves at them.

      --
      Frozen Insanity
      http://frozen-solid.net
    6. Re:When do we get this treatment for our ebooks? by hedwards · · Score: 1

      Amazon didn't have much choice with the DRM, not with Apple engaging in monopoly abuse. DRM free was pretty much the only way that they could provide a service that was competitive with the ITMS and I'm sure it cost them plenty in terms of pool of songs and price.

    7. Re:When do we get this treatment for our ebooks? by LoganDzwon · · Score: 1

      No dude, gnasher719 had it pretty much right. The record companies were mad at Apple's market dominance, Steve Jobs's "public letter," and the general pressure Apple was putting on them to DRM-free the music. A couple companies let Apple DRM-free their music as a "trial." Then the record companies gave Amazon a preferable deal (no DRM) to try to reduce Apple's power over them. I bet they are loving that decision now. The interesting part of it all is that I know Apple is contractually obligated to not allow multiple downloads the same file without charging for each download. (They have been in negotiation for 2 years now to change that.) I imagine Amazon must have the same contract which leads me to believe that even the courts buy the ,"upload your own files at your own risk," their MP3 store must be violating the multiple download clause.

    8. Re:When do we get this treatment for our ebooks? by Frozen-Solid · · Score: 1

      I'm not going to argue it, but whatever the reasoning the fact of the matter is that Amazon is far quicker to push against the industry in the MP3 market and is far more consumer friendly to their Digital Music customers than they are with the book industry and their ebook customers. Every time Amazon has done something new and amazing with the Kindle and the Publishers took offense, Amazon almost immediately backtracked and did everything they could to appease the publishers. Remember the text-to-speech firmware upgrade? Publishers threw a shit fit until Amazon caved and let them turn it off on a book by book basis, even though the chances of text-to-speech actually having any affect on the audiobook industry were pretty much zero. A robot voice does not compare to a professional voice actor doing the reading. Amazon could have easily fought that, but they didn't.

      --
      Frozen Insanity
      http://frozen-solid.net
    9. Re:When do we get this treatment for our ebooks? by Duradin · · Score: 1

      Or the RIAA gave them DRM free to provide some leverage against the iTMS monster the RIAA had created and were losing control of.

  31. Just for this to be in question by dfcamara · · Score: 1

    Just for this to be in question shows how little the public knows about theirs own rights. Yes, it's tough to own and enforce copyrights in the digital age, but the burden must not be on the consumer.

  32. Dear RIAA by alienzed · · Score: 1

    Why won't you just die quietly?

    --
    Never say never. Ah!! I did it again!
  33. But the music industry... by TavisJohn · · Score: 1

    DOES require a license if you wish to transfer music from one machine to another over a local area network. It is just impossible to enforce.
    They would also prefer if you purchased a separate copy of the music for each device you play it on. One copy for the car, one for your computer, one for each MP3 playing device (iPod, Cellphone).

    Basically they think they should get re-paid for the same music several times over. If they ever figure out how to monitor the consumer, they will send a bill to you should you take that CD you played in your home stereo and put it into your car.

    1. Re:But the music industry... by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      The question at hand is not what the music industry requires, but rather what the law requires. Amazon seems to believe that they're in the clear. This will certainly end up in court, but so much the better - if we can get a clear and definite positive precedent on this kind of thing, it would be awesome. And this isn't RIAA vs underdog, this is RIAA vs a huge corporation with big pockets, so chances are good.

    2. Re:But the music industry... by TavisJohn · · Score: 1

      It IS what the music industry wants/requires. At least at first.

      I suspect that the RIAA will do what it has always done. It will sue, and if it might loose it will drop the suit, then sue again... Rinse repeat.

  34. Putting Amazon.com vs. the RIAA into perspective by zsazsa · · Score: 4, Interesting

    In 2009, Amazon's corporate revenues were $26.53B. For the same year, the entire RIAA's revenues were only $6.3B.

    Amazon should be able to swat them down like a fly.

  35. Not YET... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do I need a license to stream MP3s from system RAM to the MP3 player? From my Hard Drive to RAM? From my File Server to my machine?

    Not yet you don't. But rest assured, the MAFIAA are busy trying to figure out how to make you buy one...

  36. Read the Fine Print by Kagato · · Score: 1

    If you look at the fine print of the license agreement you have to attest to Amazon that YOU have the proper license to upload and stream the file. YOU accept all responsibility if it turns out to be illegal.

    1. Re:Read the Fine Print by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do read their cloud TOS, section 5.1 and 5.2 where you guarantee you have the rights to upload each file and they have the right to access your files at will.

      And then posit the following nightmare:
      (1) This service becomes popular, many people use it.
      (2) RIAA shrieks--"WAAAHH! your service includes some unknown number of pirates, we need a complete listing of files and users to protect our rights, here's a subpoena from our tame judge, now produce that listing, nothing short of that will stop the terrible damage to us!". Amazon loses after several challenges and ponies up your name and mp3 list along with several million others. Crunch, crunch go the big machines on the databases, comparing all industry sales records they already have to everyone's name and mp3 list, threatening letters go out to tens of millions of users demanding that each either provide original documentation that every non-matching file of music was purchased legitimately, or pay insanely high settlements, otherwise expect to spend their entire lives and fortunes fighting the accusation.
      (3) RIAA lawyers and label executives retire rich, yay!! Artists continue to get next to nothing, the public gets screwed, again.
      (4) Pundits point to the decision as the Internet "finally being brought to order", and an example to follow up with more repressive legislation.

      Given the stupidity of copyright decisions in the US, it could happen, expecting Amazon to fight for your rights is silly, these are the same folks who gave you KindleGate.

      Anonymous? You betcha.

  37. An interesting fine line is being approached by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

    The question which may get raised - and this is part of a slippery slope - is what happens when Amazon puts your purchases in your storage area for you directly, and then uses deduplication to minimize the total storage on their servers? Because the Amazon versions are bit-identical copies, they would hold only one master which would be served to many end users. The only difference between Amazon and MP3.com at that point is that Amazon collected the first sale revenue.

    There's a second part to this. Since many files will be copied, and even two independently ripped mp3s. flacs, wavs, etc, can be bit-identical, Amazon could be deduplicating and re-serving consumer uploaded content.

    I hope they win, but there will be some sticky spots to get through along the way.

    --
    Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
    1. Re:An interesting fine line is being approached by pclminion · · Score: 1

      The day when a judge, a lawyer, and a person randomly selected off the street can actually understand why de-duplication makes absolutely no logical difference to what happens, is a day I might see a glimmer of hope for the human race.

    2. Re:An interesting fine line is being approached by EvanED · · Score: 1

      The only difference between Amazon and MP3.com at that point is that Amazon collected the first sale revenue.

      Not true. For tracks not from Amazon's store, there's another huge difference: the "proof" that you have access to the file in question is the fact that you uploaded the whole thing to Amazon. With My.MP3.com, that wasn't true.

      In other words, from the point of view of the client end, Amazon's true deduplication is an implementation detail, and the client wouldn't be able to figure out if it was being used or not. In the case of My.MP3.com, the client end wouldn't work at all if MP3.com had turned off their "deduplication".

      For tracks that come directly from Amazon, the "only difference" you mention is pretty big. In the case of My.MP3.com, the "I have legitimate access to this song" proof is relatively weak: you could just borrow a disc from a friend or the library or whatever, and My.MP3.com would then be distributing the tracks to you. For Amazon, they know you bought it -- no question. Short of hacking Amazon's servers, there's absolutely no way for you to get access to something in Amazon's library you didn't buy.

      I'm not saying these things will necessarily make the difference, and it's not like it doesn't bring forth new problems (particularly for the users), but I do think it would be a very logical place to draw the line.

    3. Re:An interesting fine line is being approached by gnasher719 · · Score: 1

      The day when a judge, a lawyer, and a person randomly selected off the street can actually understand why de-duplication makes absolutely no logical difference to what happens, is a day I might see a glimmer of hope for the human race.

      There are probably a few judges and lawyers who understand this. However, a judge would always go by what the law actually says, and by facts. In case of data de-duplication a judge would also go by what _actually_ happens, not by what _logically_ happens.

  38. WOOHOO! by Tolkien · · Score: 1

    Finally a big player has stepped into the ring. :D This should be great!

  39. You're missing the point by name_already_taken · · Score: 1

    Notice every one of your sentences starts with 'I' except for all the bits where Amazon is involved which you seemed to have excluded. I doubt the courts will be so willing to ignore that Amazon IS in the picture.

    There are two parties involved.

    Amazon is not "excluded" from that example:

    I replace the dedicated VM with an account on someone else's system, is this legal?

    Amazon is the "someone else". They're renting you virtual space on a virtual system. By your logic, you can't store music in a rented apartment because the landlord is involved. Any judge or jury would say that you can do that.

    --
    Putting moderation advice in your .sig lowers your karma!
  40. Right. If they use something like plan9 Venti by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    then it happens automatically.

  41. Re:Single Instance Storage by alen · · Score: 1

    if i had to guess then i'd say that when you upload your music to amazon they dedupe it so that it only takes a tiny amount of space. and technically it's a separate file so they can just argue that they are providing cloud storage and you're streaming your unique content. when in the end it's all deduped common data. intel x86 hardware is powerful and cheap enough these days to probably process the deduped data on the fly when people want to stream it

  42. What constitutes "streaming" by cultiv8 · · Score: 1

    From my understanding of the article, it seems the crux of the argument between Amazon and RIAA et. al. is the definition of streaming; Amazon will argue users are downloading files from a "cloud" based external hard drive while the music industry will argue that transferring music files from a point of origin to a playback device is streaming.

    --
    sysadmins and parents of newborns get the same amount of sleep.
  43. Digital Locker by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The RIAA and MPAA have been trying for years to find a way to shut down offsite backup services like Mozy and Carbonite because they idiotically think that storing my files somewhere else aids piracy in some way. If they win a lawsuit against Amazon for Cloud Streaming it could open the door to lawsuits against offsite file storage services that have nothing to do with music or media in any way.

    Amazon better win or I'm going to be pissed.

  44. Dear "Music Industry" by JustAnotherIdiot · · Score: 1

    Please go die, and stop crying every time you don't make enough money on the backs of underpaid artists.

    --
    What do I know, I'm just an idiot, right?
  45. What wil the music industry do about by falconwolf · · Score: 1

    Amazon's Cloud Player?

    With the number of lawsuits the music industry has filed against people I hate to say it, but this is one lawsuit I'd love for them to file. And then have Amazon file a counter lawsuit, and win. Copyrights and copyright laws have been way out there, in outer space, for too long and need to be grounded.

    Falcon

  46. Two payments for the single license? by GooberToo · · Score: 2

    Isn't a streaming license intended to charge a fee for streaming content to which the listener likely doesn't own a license; or at the very least, is unknown? In this case, hasn't the listener already paid (assuming the content isn't stolen) for a license on the content they are streaming to themselves? Assuming I understand the issue correctly, it really sounds like they are trying hard to double dip and receive payment twice for the same license.

    Anyone know if consumer music has an explicit streaming license clause attached? And if so, has that ever been tested?

    1. Re:Two payments for the single license? by Frozen-Solid · · Score: 2

      That's exactly what they're doing, or arguing that Amazon didn't pay for a license that lets you download your MP3s that you purchased from them multiple times. Their argument would basically be that each separate download or stream of the MP3 should be it's own license. Previously that is how Amazon MP3 worked, and how iTunes works now. Each single download is it's own license.

      --
      Frozen Insanity
      http://frozen-solid.net
    2. Re:Two payments for the single license? by GooberToo · · Score: 1

      If that's the case, any idea what a "streaming license" actually includes? Any idea why the original license isn't applicable?

    3. Re:Two payments for the single license? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't remember buying a license to any music I own, that would imply there were terms involved. I bought those music files, they're mine, I can do anything I want with them provided it does not violate the law.

  47. Re:Where does playback start and other questions.. by darkwing_bmf · · Score: 1

    This is not broadcasting.

    Wikipedia: "Broadcasting is the distribution of audio and video content to a dispersed audience via radio, television, or other. Receiving parties may include the general public or a relatively large subset of thereof."

  48. the ASCAP wanted jukebox license for guitar hero a by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the ASCAP wanted jukebox license for guitar hero arcade and that was on top the license fees the makes of guitar hero had so this may need more then 1 license.

  49. Stalingrad by MarkvW · · Score: 1

    This could be a real big software patent showdown. Two corporate behemoths, loaded to the gills with money, prepared to fight the software patent battle down to the bloody bitter end.

    I can only dream. To me patenting a streaming format is like patenting a spoken language. A company cannot patent how I program my mind; they shouldn't be able to patent how I program my computer. This is a basic liberty question.

    1. Re:Stalingrad by I3OI3 · · Score: 1
      An interesting metaphor, but this isn't about patents at all. It's about copyright, and what are your implicit rights when you buy a CD, or an MP3 from iTunes or Amazon.

      Copyrights, patents, and trademarks are very different things; we need to be very exact when discussing them in the context of discussions about our basic liberties, or we can be easily dismissed as not grasping the fundamentals of what we're talking about.

    2. Re:Stalingrad by MarkvW · · Score: 1

      Thanks. I stand corrected.

  50. It IS that broad in the Berne convention. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    It IS that broad in the Berne convention. 100%.

  51. Yes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If the RIAA/MPAA /whatever had it's way you would be executed for file sharing and copyright infringement.

  52. Re:Where does playback start and other questions.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I guess this all depends on the definition of broadcast but at least from my perspective (IANAL), all of the above scenerios are unicast and not broadcast since you are only sending the data to your one or two specified devices and not en-mass to the public or a broad audience.

  53. License Everything! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The music industry would like to license the streaming of music from your ears to your brain. Plans are underway to monitor brain waves to monitor this transmission and DCMA takedowns may follow.

    In the future, you will need licensing for even thinking of a tune, no ear-streaming involved.

  54. Not that exciting by AnonymmousCoward · · Score: 1

    I must say I was quite excited when I read the headline. After reading the actual article though I must say I am much less so. It seems like this is an argument over who can stream what content from where, assuming that the streamed content was already legally obtained. In this regard, if Amazon and the RIAA DO battle in court, I feel like very little will change in the ways of RIAA's current copyright laws. Furthermore, I suspect that the RIAA knows its bounds, and will avoid going to court outright against Amazon especially since their argument seems to be rather weak. I think the best we can expect is an undisclosed settlement between the two.

    1. Re:Not that exciting by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      This may be a big deal in a sense that this will clarify the muddy waters of what is fair use for the users (is it okay to make a copy for your own use? to give third party access to said copy for them to provide related services to you?)

  55. Re:beat by TaoPhoenix · · Score: 1

    xkcd wins again!

    Rub your lamp!

    http://xkcd.com/879/

    --
    My first Journal Entry ever, in 8 years! http://slashdot.org/journal/365947/aphelion-scifi-fantasy-horror-poetry-webzine
  56. I wonder what Google will come up with by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The idea of putting my music collection into a cloud (hate that term, btw) is appealing, but the lack of ogg or flac support pretty much rules it out for me.

  57. According to the Music Industry.... by zildgulf · · Score: 2

    >Do I need a license to stream MP3s from system RAM to the MP3 player?
    >From my Hard Drive to RAM? From my File Server to my machine?

    According to the Music Industry to need to pay licensing fee for:

    - Ripping CDs to the CPU
    - Copying music in the CPU to the cache
    - Copying music in the cache to RAM
    - Copying music in RAM to the Hard Drive
    - Copying music between Hard Drives
    - Copying music from your PC to your MP3 player
    - Uploading or downloading music from your internet backup
    - Uploading or downloading music to and from any backup media and/or server(s)
    - Listening to your music on any device
    - Listening to music on TV, Radio, etc
    - Having music in any format
    - When someone on your block did one of these things and didn't pay them
    - Saying the word "music"
    - Listening or singing any music, including any song they do not own
    - For living
    - For being dead

    If you don't believe me look up some of the lawsuits the RIAA has filed.

    1. Re:According to the Music Industry.... by EvanED · · Score: 1

      - Copying music in the CPU to the cache
      - Copying music in the cache to RAM

      The cache? The cache? You have at least two caches, sir, and perhaps three. Don't be skipping out on your licencing payments.

      -The RIAA

    2. Re:According to the Music Industry.... by omnichad · · Score: 1

      And God help you if you don't have enough RAM and you have to use virtual memory.

  58. Re:Putting Amazon.com vs. the RIAA into perspectiv by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Or just buy them.

  59. Re:Putting Amazon.com vs. the RIAA into perspectiv by metrometro · · Score: 2

    More importantly, a big chunk of those RIAA revenue came through Amazon. They are the #2 music retailer after Walmart. They can slow down the money pipe, and quickly, for the label that gets in front of this bus. Worst case, they go scorched earth and quit selling that label's albums for a week. Every artist on the label's roster will freak. Investors will panic. Blood in the streets.

    Amazon owns those guys. And that's while this will last. A smaller site could never get away with it. In the end, public policy and rule of law is once again a leaf on the wind when corporate interests clash. The loser is market competition, and eventually, all of us.

  60. Re:Putting Amazon.com vs. the RIAA into perspectiv by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The RIAA still has the Chewbacca defense available to them.

  61. a file is a file by Gripp · · Score: 1

    same old arguement:
    you're allowed to upload whatever file you want for storage, and retrieve it from where ever you want, but only if it doesn't end with mp3?
    you're allowed to put them on an external drive, but not if that external drive exists on another machine?
    you're allowed to record songs from the radio, and play them from anywhere you wish, but not from a server? what if own the server? what you have rights to the server? does that mean
    who makes these fucking laws? they;re my files and i'll do what damn well please with them. (short of giving them everyone for free, of course..)

  62. Hell Yeah by holophrastic · · Score: 0

    There's a huge difference between streaming from your hard drive versus streaming from amazon. Yoru hard drive is YOUR hard drive. No one profits when you stream from your hard drive.

    But Amazon makes real money when you stream from their cloud. Real actual dollars of profit. That CD you purchased says "all rights reserved", as did the mp3 that you purchased. That means it's yours to do with as YOU please. You can't, for example, start to distribute it and sell it to thousands of people.

    Just like you can't buy a car, reverse engineer it, and start mass-producing that car and competing with Mazda with their own product. You bought the car, not the plans to the car, nor the rights to sell it.

    When you use amazon's cloud to stream your music, it's your music, and you've done nothing wrong. But amazon has. Because every time you stream it, they are effectively selling it to you again. They either charge you per usage, or advertise to you, or promote additional services. That means amazon is redistributing and reselling the music. you don't have the right to grant that permission to them. and they don't have it in the first place.

    Otherwise, think about it. You build something, took you years. you sell it to your first customer. your first customer uploads it to their amazon cloud. amazon's cloud has a bug. and it gets shared with everyone. amazon screwed up. you never sold it to them in the first place. or amazon adds a feature that lets your first customer share it with the world. what stops them? it's not illegal for amazon to share something that they own. and it's not illegal for amazon to let your first customer share something that the first customer owns. the point is, neither of them own it in a way that they can mass-distribute it.

    Similarly, you can't take music you purchased and put on a concert to 20'000 people. you never purchased those rights. you spent $0.99, the ability to listen to it. not to publish it. not te perform it.

    Damn, how much would you charge to have music that you created performed publicly? It'd be more than $0.99.

    Full disclosure: I'm NOT in the music industry in any way. I write software, and I don't like when people steal it.

    1. Re:Hell Yeah by darkwing_bmf · · Score: 1

      But Amazon makes real money when you stream from their cloud.

      This is bullshit. Amazon loses money when you stream from their cloud. They make money when they sell you music and they make money when they sell you additional storage. But actually storing and streaming cost money.

    2. Re:Hell Yeah by holophrastic · · Score: 1

      It's a part of their business model, and their business model makes money. That's enough. If it weren't an important part of their model, they wouldn't need it, and they wouldn't care.

      It has value to them. So they should being paying for it. That's what "value" means in a capitalist society.

      More importantly, it's not their decision to make. It's not their property in the first place.

    3. Re:Hell Yeah by slinches · · Score: 1

      When you use amazon's cloud to stream your music, it's your music, and you've done nothing wrong. But amazon has. Because every time you stream it, they are effectively selling it to you again. They either charge you per usage, or advertise to you, or promote additional services. That means amazon is redistributing and reselling the music. you don't have the right to grant that permission to them. and they don't have it in the first place.

      So what you're saying is that it is copyright infringement on the part of a cloud service provider to allow the storage of files that the end user does not own the copyright to? I agree that Amazon would be infringing copyright if they allowed access to someone other than the proper owner of that copy, but that's not what this service does. It allows the owner of a copy to store said copy and retrieve it. Nothing else. Amazon is taking a risk here in that if the service isn't secured well enough and the files are somehow made publicly accessible, they could end up unintentionally committing copyright infringement on a huge scale.

      Actually, I'm not sure why the music industry would be against a service like this. It would allow a very easy means to track and catch copyright infringers. All they'd have to do is request that the cloud service provider give them info on users that upload a large number of files matching naming/hashes/watermarks of music on known illegal file sharing sites.

      --
      Knowledge Brings Fear
    4. Re:Hell Yeah by tgibbs · · Score: 1

      It's a part of their business model, and their business model makes money.

      And a hard drive manufacturer's business model depends upon making money from people storing their data (of which digital music is for most people a large part).

    5. Re:Hell Yeah by rbayer · · Score: 2

      You bought the car, not the plans to the car, nor the rights to sell it.

      Really? You're telling me I don't have the right to sell a car I own? You might want to check your facts there.

      There's a huge difference between streaming from your hard drive versus streaming from amazon. Yoru hard drive is YOUR hard drive. No one profits when you stream from your hard drive.

      Not really. Is it OK if I put my mp3's in my Dropbox folder so I can listen to them at both work and at home? That's certainly not MY hard drive, but it seems perfectly legit to me.

      Amazon is NOT starting a streaming service where you don't have to pay; what they ARE doing is starting a service that helps people listen to music they already own. If I have the right to listen to my music (which of course the RIAA would prefer I didn't), then why don't I have the right to hire a company to help me do it?

    6. Re:Hell Yeah by snkiz · · Score: 1

      Your an idiot, Amazon isn't reselling you your music by streaming. Just giving you easy access to storage you paid Amazon for. (or storage they are offering for free.) There is no restriction on what you store there and no else has access to your storage. (baring a security breach.) For all intents and purposes Amazon is a external HDD with long range capabilities. You say you write software and don't appreciate people stealing it? based on your arguments I'd bet you consider using a VPN or remote server theft then?

    7. Re:Hell Yeah by darkwing_bmf · · Score: 1

      Business "models" don't make money. Selling stuff makes money. If they sell more mp3s because of this then they win. But guess what? If they sell more mp3s the record companies also win. The recording industry is in no way harmed by this.

    8. Re:Hell Yeah by holophrastic · · Score: 1

      Oh, I certainly agree that the music industry might very well benefit from this service in the ways that you've described. But that's not my decision. I'm sure they should consider more than what I see at first glance.

      Regarding the rest of your comments, there's the one more part. It's less about amazon's service being exclusively storage, and more about amazon's service being commercial. If I were a commercial music person -- perhaps I'm a producer who works with music every day, professionally, and have all of the licences to do so in general. And I use a commercial professional service to help me manage my business, then my licence to work with the material easily extends to those third-party contractors that I use to do business. That's a part of any NDA's need-to-know boundary extensions too.

      In this case, we're talking about consumer music persons, not commercial ones. And now they are contracting a commercial entity. Which means that the product (the music) is moving from a consumer buyer to a commercial business. In everything, that's a different world. Back to the car examples as always, you can drive your friend to work, and call it carpooling. But if you start to drive many people to work, and they pay for gas, you become a business. Your car becomes a commercial vehicle. Your insurrance changes, your tax changes, and your car needs to be inspected differently for "public safety". And if you offer rides to the public, you become a taxi, which brings about way more laws and issues, to protect all involved -- including the car manufacturer whose warranty was never designed for continuous usage scenarios.

      In the end, it really comes down to the one phrase -- "that's not what it was sold for". Pricing changes, safety changes, people need protecting differently. Perhaps the original artist used a snippet from another source, and purchased the licence for that snippet, and isn't allowed to sell it on-line. Television shows used to licence music and not purchase the licence to VHS tapes for that music. Years later, the show's released without the opening music (Married With Children is a good example).

      You never know where the rights exist across the many many people involved along the ways. But the music industry is interesting that way. You can pay a central source who can grant you rights to other people's property. Because it's convenient that way. Radio stations, for example, can usually play anything at any time for any reason -- because they pay for that ability in general. It's interesting.

      But I've always liked the other sides too. The side that people use in politics and in law. Some things are slippery slopes, and some things become ambiguous. Sure free speech was never meant to include a lot of things that it does, but there's no good legal way to limit it without ruining the good parts. The same goes for any legal exercise, music distribution included.

      At some level, there's likely no good way to allow amazon to do what they itnend, without also allowing your neighbour to hold onto your collection, index it, play it for himself, and something. It can be a failure of the legal system to differentiate. It doens't have to be the specific case itself.

    9. Re:Hell Yeah by holophrastic · · Score: 0

      Read harder. That's not what I said. You can't sell the plans. And you can't sell the car multiple times. You also can't sell public tickets to view the car.

      It is yours in that situation. You have pseudo property to your dropbox (not knowing what a dropbox is outside of english). But the moment you transfer it to a commercial entity, then no, it's not legit -- because you given that commercial entity, in this case amazon, something of value -- like information on what your music is, how it works, and when you listen to it. Not all of that information is yours to give, and it has real value when amazon sells it to advertisers and the like. So you've allowed amazon to profit from music that someone else has created. That's not fair to them.

      What amazon is doing is convincing you to use their service so that they get value. You get convenience, they get value. Then they sell that value and make money.

      But, look, it's simple. You create something. Do it tomorrow. Spend a week, that'll be enough. Then sell it to me for a week's worth of pay. Let's say $2'000. I'll pay you $2'000 for 40 hours of your time to create and invent something that you worked hard at that meets my needs. Then I'll go and show it to my friend. I'll let him hold it for me. He'll then, maybe, remember what it looks like and make something similar -- different, but similar -- inspired purely by your invention. And he'll sell it for $95'000. He'll have spent only 2 days working -- because he had your product as a template.

      You'll be happy, because you got $2'000 -- albeit for something that was worth way more. It wasn't worth more to me. Which is why you didn't ask me for more. And you couldn't ask my friend, because he's not interested in talking to you. Because he doesn't want to pay the $30'000 that would be fair to you. He'd rather wait for me to buy it, then give me a free storage locker worth $50. He'll keep the remaining $29'500 for himself.

      That's how it works. And that's why it's illegal. Because the only solution is for you to never do the work in the first place, which doesn't help anyone.

    10. Re:Hell Yeah by holophrastic · · Score: 1

      Nope, not true. The hard drive manufacturer's busines model depends on you using their product. They don't get any kind of access to the content at all. They don't receive ANYTHING from you except the dollars. And the dollars that you give to them are most definitely yours to give (loans aside).

      However, amazon won't receive your dollars. They'll receive your music -- which isn't entirely yours. Because you don't own the rights to most aspects of the music. You own the rights to listen to the music, not to analyze it and to sell the results.

      Amazon will then profit from your actual music. They'll hash it, they'll index it, they'll analyze it, and they'll sell the stats for real dollars.

      If I write music, and it's mine, and someone steals it, it doesn't matter if they stole it to listen to it (which was the reason that I wrote it) or they stole it to analyze it and discover what good music really is (which was to be my next reason to sell it, maybe), they've still stolen my music and used it and profitted from it and paid me nothing.

      That's what's happening. Amazon is getting the artist's music, because you're giving it to amazon, without the artist's permission. You've transfered a consumer good that you purchased as a consumer to a commercial entity without anyone ever paying commercial prices.

      That's not what the HDD does.

    11. Re:Hell Yeah by holophrastic · · Score: 0

      They are MOST DEFINITELY reselling your music. Not the music part of the music. Every other part of the music. The stats on how often you listen to it. Who listens to it, where, when, why. What it looks like, how long it is, what kind of beats it uses, how easily it gets compressed.

      They take the music, toss it through sixteen algorithms to get data that they find interesting, and then THEY SELL IT for real dollars.

      What, did you think it's a free service offered by a profitable company just to be nice?

      Amazon is only like a remote HDD if you tell western digital exactly how you use the files on your drive, and then let them analyze those files for interesting information.

      A VPN between my server and my workstation, is my tunnel. And telecommunication laws allow the pipes inbetween to be neutral -- forced to be by law. Your ISP is actually not allowed to read the data that they carry (with a number of exceptions for legitimate reasons, and those reasons go through a lot of debate before they are permitted).

      But we'll take your example. If my server only serves the USA, because I paid my managed host to only serve the USA, and I tunnel from Canada through to the USA, and proxy the content through to Canada, yes that's a problem. It's a problem because my host only promissed service to the USA. Which means they can licence other people's products that are illegal to use in Canada. By essentially tricking the connection, I've created a situation where my host is serving content to canada illegally. In this case, I've made the proxy redistribute a tv show only licenced for USA broadcast into an international broadcast.

      And the actors didn't get paid anything more.

      But this is easy. You spend a year, and develop a tv show. Yourself on camera. And you make it good. And you try to sell it. I'll come along, and offer to buy your show. I'll offer to pay to $10'000. I'll only show it in new york, to see if it's any good. After six months, if it works I'll buy it from you for $150'000, and we'll go national. If it doesn't, you can have it back. Meanwhile, you can't sell it to anyone else. That's the deal. You shop it around, and you decide that it's a risk you want to take. After all, you believe it'll work in new york, and you believe that I'm the guy who can make it happen. So you take the $10'000, and give me the show.

      I air it in new york, I market the hell out of it, in new york. And it does well. Before the six months, someone in their basement sees the show, and likes it. so they record it (let's pretend it's 1985) and bring it with them to LA. They play it for 500 of their friends in the tv business, just for fun. Hey, look how great this show is, we should do something like this.

      It went well in new york, so I take it to hollywood to pitch it to LA, and to go national as promissed. They tell me that they've seen it many months ago, and they're already making something similar on their own. So I give it back to you, because it's not worthless to me. And you're out. A few months later, they release their show, and you haven nothing more to offer.

      It happened because you couldn't move fast enough on your own, and I wasn't willing to throw enough money on a risky thing that quickly. And you couldn't find anyone willing to do so.

      The proper systems allow you to start small, because you need to. By allowing someone to proxy stuff and sling stuff around, and publicly (500 is public) showcase your work without your permission, you allow that person to take control of your future with respect to your property. That stifles any chance you have of controlling it yourself.

      This amazon situation is the same thing. You no longer allow the music artist to sell the analysis of his music, because amazon's already done that with his and everyone else's music. Amazon will say, in big bold letters, "the rolling stone's music has more beats per second and appeals to monkeys and humans 20% more often than michael jackson's music". A

    12. Re:Hell Yeah by holophrastic · · Score: 1

      You don't get to sell my product, on your terms, and say that I win. You don't get to take something that I sell for $10, resell it differently for $50, adn say I win. You never bought the right to resell it. I'll say whether or not you can resell my product, thank you. It's not yours to resell, or to redistribute, as a business. (Personal transfer is way different.)

      Business "models" do make money -- when you sell the business.

    13. Re:Hell Yeah by darkwing_bmf · · Score: 1

      Amazon isn't reselling anything. They have the right to sell the mp3 which was already negotiated. You have no say whether or not they can sell storage.

    14. Re:Hell Yeah by snkiz · · Score: 1

      One Glearing problem with you theroy, Amazon isn't broadcasting, they're unicasting, to the registered user of the cloud drive, and only data they themselves uploaded. They are not charging money for basic service, no matter how loud you claim they are. They have a ToS that spells out exactly what they will do with your data. Do I believe they just store it and never look at it again? No that would be naive. But really what they're doing isn't a whole lot different that what dropbox does, and its exactly what Ubuntu One does. Its also what Google and Apple are planing on doing. (The difference being Amazon has enough clout/balls to not be bullied by **AA.) The rest of your analogy, while intresting only serves as a reminder of how broken that model is in TODAYS market. (if it ever really worked.) The part you left out, is when the Hollywood studio gets sued for infringement. You want to dawn you tinfoil hat and hide in the conner from Gmail, Amazon and the like, thats fine. But stomping your feet, whining about getting paid and fear mongering, only makes you look foolish at best, a sympathetic shill at worst.

    15. Re:Hell Yeah by tgibbs · · Score: 1

      If Amazon takes your music and sells it to somebody else, then they are violating copyright.
      But they have no reason to do that, because they are a digital music store--they already have copies of all of your music--they don't need yours.
      If they simply provide online storage of the music you have bought (which you own, even though the law limits what you can do with it, just as it limits what you can do with your car or your gun), then they are simply acting in the role of a hard drive vendor. The only difference is where the hard drive resides.
      Amazon makes no profit from the hard drive storage, unless you purchase more from them (in which case they are providing the same capability as a hard drive vendor). So the free storage serves their business model in that it enhances the value of what they do sell (i.e. music), and it acts as a free sample to interest customers in their paid storage plans.

    16. Re:Hell Yeah by holophrastic · · Score: 1

      You are not reading hard enough. They don't have the right to sell the data that they glean about the mp3s. and that's exactly what they are doing.

    17. Re:Hell Yeah by holophrastic · · Score: 1

      Amazon's ToS were agreed to by you. Not by the owner of the music that you're giving to them, that's the problem.

      But like I said. It's your turn. You create something, and then see what you think others should be able to do with it. For as long as you get paid a salary, or work for someone else, your opinion on property ownership is worthless -- because you don't own any property to protect.

      But you are certainly correct, the existing systems and models don't work today, and they haven't worked since tape dubbing was a consumer option.

    18. Re:Hell Yeah by holophrastic · · Score: 1

      you missed the point. amazon gets your usage data regarding the music. That's something that no drive vendor gets. that has real value. and it's not something that's yours to give away. some of it is, but not all of it. not the group aggregate actually. that's property of the music owner -- usually the artist or publisher. not you. you can't give that to amazon because it's not yours.

      and that's what they wind up selling, which is how they profit, and wyh it's free to you.

    19. Re:Hell Yeah by tgibbs · · Score: 1

      you missed the point. amazon gets your usage data regarding the music. That's something that no drive vendor gets. that has real value. and it's not something that's yours to give away. some of it is, but not all of it. not the group aggregate actually. that's property of the music owner -- usually the artist or publisher.

      That's ridiculous. I've not signed away my rights to information about my own behavior. A music vendor only has rights to my usage data if they pay me for it. For exclusive access to that information, my price is $1,000 per song. So far, nobody has been lining up to buy. Until such time as I sign away exclusive rights to information about me, that information is mine to do with as I wish. I can certainly trade it to Amazon in return for online storage (although in point of fact, Amazon already has some of that information, since I buy most of my music through Amazon).

    20. Re:Hell Yeah by holophrastic · · Score: 1

      And if I tell you that when you use their cloud service, you're giving them exactly that? They know each and every time you listen, from where to where, where you were when you were listening, what you tend to skip. And then, with a little calculator, what kind of mood you were in across the month, when your girlfriend dumped you (with an 80% accuracy), and so on and so forth.

      And they don't need your permission, because they aren't measuring your downloads of your music from them, they are measuring their uploads of your music to you. Even though it's 100% identical, with a three-second latency easily factored in.

      You don't need to sign away those rights. You've created rights on their side, and simply synchronized the two sets of data.

      That's the problem. They get exactly that, without paying you the $1'000 at all -- let alone per song.

    21. Re:Hell Yeah by tgibbs · · Score: 1

      And if I tell you that when you use their cloud service, you're giving them exactly that?

      You wouldn't be telling me anything that I didn't already know. But the point is that it's my information, not the record company's, and I can give it away or sell it as I choose.

      That's the problem. They get exactly that, without paying you the $1000 at all -- let alone per song.

      The $1000 per song is for exclusive rights, which would prohibit me from selling that information or using a similar cloud service from another vendor, such as Apple.

    22. Re:Hell Yeah by holophrastic · · Score: 1

      No, it's not all yours. What you do is yours. What you do with someone else's property is, in part, theirs. We're talking commercially here. And you're giving commercial usage rights to that information over to amazon. It's not all yours to give. Because you didn't buy those rights for $0.99. That's why.

      Your music would simply cost more, if you were to be sold those rights. And today's market has chosen fewer rights for fewer dollars, instead of greater rights for greater dollars. That's why you can now have a collection of music that smokes even the wealthiest music enthusiast's collection 30 years ago.

      You don't have more than he did. You have less of more. He had more of less. There's a difference.

    23. Re:Hell Yeah by darkwing_bmf · · Score: 1

      You say this but that doesn't make it true.

    24. Re:Hell Yeah by holophrastic · · Score: 1

      Actually, I said "that". You said "this".

      (:

  63. What about sharing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Think about how easy it will be for someone to "share" their entire music collection with their friends, simply by giving them their login info. Amazon basically is host to share anything and everything. At least that is how the RIAA will probably spin this.

  64. Actually, it is by poptones · · Score: 1

    It is technically illegal for you to rip CDs for which you do not own the rights to do so. This de minimis infringement may not be practically enforceable and may not, individually, cause harm to copyright owners, but one does NOT make the same case when talking about employment opportunities. Now we've moved from the realm of "mv cds for my use" to "rip anyone's cds for anyone's use." You're making a business model of wilfully and knowingly violating the law, and the courts generally frown on that.

    1. Re:Actually, it is by Vancorps · · Score: 1

      Except that's not what Amazon is going to do. You can only play music that you yourself upload and the same for everyone else. Therefore you are not violating any current laws as it's no different than storing music on your WD Live player.

    2. Re:Actually, it is by Homburg · · Score: 1

      It is technically illegal for you to rip CDs for which you do not own the rights to do so.

      It is legal in the US. Well, it's not absolutely settled, but precedent seems to support the idea that ripping CDs is fair use. From the EFF:

      "ripping" an audio CD (that is, making an MP3-format version of an audio CD that you already own) is considered fair use by many lawyers, based on the 1984 Betamax decision and the 1999 Rio MP3 player decision (RIAA v. Diamond Multimedia, 180 F. 3d 1072, 1079, 9th Circ. 1999.)

  65. RIAA propaganda by Uberbah · · Score: 3

    That would be music that you yourself performed and recorded. Otherwise, you don't "own" the music. You own nothing but a license

    You own a copy of that music, big difference. Which means that this...

    to play it under the terms that its real owner dictates

    ...is total BS. You can buy music, transfer it to any devices you own, make a thousand personal backup copies of it, destroy it, list it on Ebay for a billion dollars - and there's not a damned thing the label can do about it.

    What copyright restricts you from doing is making copies of music and distributing them without permission. All this "licensing" nonsense is just RIAA propaganda.

    Now that that's out of the way, would you by chance be interested in purchasing some oceanfront property in Nebraska?

    1. Re:RIAA propaganda by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are incorrect that the music publishing industry can't prevent you from listing your digital copy of a song on Ebay.

      http://pages.ebay.com/help/policies/downloadable.html

      If you scroll through that page, as an example of what you can't list, Ebay provides the example of "songs you bought from iTunes". I am too lazy to look up the specifics, but I suspect that policy was developed with the help of or in fear of the RIAA.

      None of the other items in your list are remotely related to a third party transmitting your own music back to you, so I'm not sure what good they do your argument. The fact is the RIAA have long made a clear distinction between an individual listening to his copy of a song and other uses of that song, such as streaming or public performance or the like. Several of those uses are backed up with solid court cases.

      I'm with you that these are the dying throes of an industry that STILL cannot accept the pace of change. But pretending that things are so that aren't so isn't going to do anyone any good.

    2. Re:RIAA propaganda by bws111 · · Score: 2

      What section of copyright law gives you the right to 'transfer to any devices you own' or 'make a thousand personal backup copies'?

    3. Re:RIAA propaganda by Noren · · Score: 1

      It's entirely legal to ebay a physical CD(at least, one legally created by the holder of copyright and purchased legitimately). Your example is a specific problem with songs 'purchased' from iTunes, not a general problem with purchased copies of music.

    4. Re:RIAA propaganda by Kjella · · Score: 2

      You can buy music, transfer it to any devices you own, make a thousand personal backup copies of it, destroy it, list it on Ebay for a billion dollars - and there's not a damned thing the label can do about it. What copyright restricts you from doing is making copies of music and distributing them without permission.

      Your examples fall into two categories - destroying it or selling it is legally your right, because it doesn't involve copyright.

      Space shifting to another device? Fair use. Backup copies? Fair use. Without fair use, you could never make any copies at all. USC 17106 says the copyright holder has the exclusive right

      (1) to reproduce the copyrighted work in copies or phonorecords;

      That's it, that's the whole quote with no exceptions or conditions. Unless any copies you make are fair use, they're illegal.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    5. Re:RIAA propaganda by nateross · · Score: 1

      Unless there was a EULA or some other agreement that restricts the rights of the individual, I don't believe there is any restriction on how many backup copies one may keep of a file. Laws restrict the rights of the individual, laws don't give rights... we are endowed by our creator with inalienable rights and among these are the right to "transfer to any devices [we] own" and "make a thousand personal backup copies."

    6. Re:RIAA propaganda by bws111 · · Score: 1

      Uh, yeah. There is no EULA, there is a law. And the specific law is USC 17 Section 106 which says:

      Subject to sections 107 through 122, the owner of copyright under this title has the exclusive rights to do and to authorize any of the following:

      (1) to reproduce the copyrighted work in copies or phonorecords;

      So this law quite plainly says that ONLY the owner of the copyright may make copies or to authorize same. You, the individual non-copyright-holder have no such right.

      Now, there are limitations on the exclusive rights granted to the copyright owner, and in those cases you DO have some rights to make copies. For instance, section 117 says that the owner of the copyright can not prevent you from making a copy of a computer program for backup - that is a right you have.

      So I ask again, which section of copyright law restricts the owner from preventing you making copies for different devices or for backup? In other words, which section of copyright law gives you the right to do that?

    7. Re:RIAA propaganda by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what section states otherwise?

    8. Re:RIAA propaganda by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What section prohibits it?

    9. Re:RIAA propaganda by bws111 · · Score: 1

      106, the one that says the copyright owner has exclusive rights to create copies. Note also that 117 specifically says that you may make backups of computer programs, but there is no such statement for music.

    10. Re:RIAA propaganda by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      What section of copyright law gives you the right to 'transfer to any devices you own' or 'make a thousand personal backup copies'?

      Fair use.

    11. Re:RIAA propaganda by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      You are incorrect that the music publishing industry can't prevent you from listing your digital copy of a song on Ebay.

      Ebay policies != laws.

      None of the other items in your list are remotely related to a third party transmitting your own music back to you, so I'm not sure what good they do your argument.

      Obviously, it was about the limitations of copyright. Owning a copyright gives you an exclusive right to make copies for distribution, and puts limits on 'public performances'. Nothing more, nothing less. Since Amazon's service doesn't do either of those, the Concerns voice here are just canards.

      The fact is the RIAA have long made a clear distinction between an individual listening to his copy of a song and other uses of that song, such as streaming or public performance or the like.

      Good thing RIAA grandstanding != laws, then.

    12. Re:RIAA propaganda by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      And the specific law is USC 17 Section 106 which says:

      For distribution. You have the right to make as many backup copies as you want, and this has also been long settled law - it's called Time Shifting.

    13. Re:RIAA propaganda by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      What copyright restricts you from doing is making copies of music and distributing them without permission.

      Actually, both making and distributing copies are separate exclusive rights of the copyright owner under copyright; distribution is not necessary for infringement if any of the other exclusive rights are violated (though without distribution, there often isn't provable harm, which limits the available remedies for certain classes of infringement.)

      The Audio Home Recording Act created a special exception for non-commercial personal copying for certain audio recordings, but the exact scope of the AHRA protection is unclear, there is very little clear case law applying it.

  66. Wrong by Animats · · Score: 2

    Just like you can't buy a car, reverse engineer it, and start mass-producing that car and competing with Mazda with their own product. You bought the car, not the plans to the car, nor the rights to sell it.

    Well, actually, you can, for most auto parts There's no copyright in functional parts. For that, you need a patent. There is a big aftermarket auto parts industry. The parts are copies of the originals, not new designs. The major auto manufacturers have tried to get legislation to stop that in the US, but Congress rejected it.

    1. Re:Wrong by Larry_Dillon · · Score: 1

      In the Bayliner case, it was ruled that you could even use the hull of a competitor's boat as the mold for yours.

      --
      Competition Good, Monopoly Bad.
    2. Re:Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just like you can't buy a car, reverse engineer it, and start mass-producing that car and competing with Mazda with their own product. You bought the car, not the plans to the car, nor the rights to sell it.

      Well, actually, you can, for most auto parts There's no copyright in functional parts. For that, you need a patent. There is a big aftermarket auto parts industry. The parts are copies of the originals, not new designs. The major auto manufacturers have tried to get legislation to stop that in the US, but Congress rejected it.

      Parts.

      What about if you put all the available parts (does that include panelwork?) together into a complete automobile and sell that (removing branding, to avoid bringing trademark into the equation)?

      I'm not saying you shouldn't be able to do that, but that you likely can't do that legally.

    3. Re:Wrong by Rudolf · · Score: 1

      What about if you put all the available parts (does that include panelwork?) together into a complete automobile and sell that (removing branding, to avoid bringing trademark into the equation)?
      You just described a kit-car, and those are perfectly legal.

    4. Re:Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly. You just can't sell it 'as a Mazda'. You could sell it as an Animatsda, if you wanted to risk trademark infringement. Sell it as 'BlorgoWheels' and you're fine.

      Oh, and any half-decently-sized auto company regularly buys their competitor's models and takes them apart. Porsche even ran an ad about it, showing (I think it was a 911) in a zillion pieces, pointing out that all the car companies had bought one and taken it apart to see how they did it, and snarkily offering to put it back together for them.

      AC

  67. F*ck the RIAA and it's halfling followers. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here you can buy this but you can't us it unles you ask us first...F*ck that. I bought it, I own it, I'll do what the hell I want with it when I want how I want. Go f*ck yourself record company execs. While your at it you might as well put a gun in your gapping ass and pull the trigger.

  68. Re:Putting Amazon.com vs. the RIAA into perspectiv by xbytor · · Score: 5, Funny

    You forgot the $73 trillion that they'll be collecting from LimeWire.

  69. Look at SCO. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    IBM was way bigger, and the proverbial "swat down" took years.

  70. am i a criminal? by Combatso · · Score: 0

    It seems, collectively, the industry is more worried about music possession than gun possession. I have a mix-tape in my old van that I made somewhere in the late-80's.. its the only cassette I still have... There is a good chance I will serve time if the cops pull me over, and find that I am in possesion of a tape containing copied Def Leppard and GnR music.

  71. Re:Putting Amazon.com vs. the RIAA into perspectiv by rebot777 · · Score: 1

    Unfortunately Amazon doesn't 50+ years of lobbying on their side. Lets hope the law sides with fair use...

  72. Re:Putting Amazon.com vs. the RIAA into perspectiv by Combatso · · Score: 1

    but... your honor.. that $26.5B would have been paid to us, had Amazon not streamed that music, taking the money straight out of poor Bono's hands.. Poor guy can barely afford to fuel his private jet this week.

  73. Re:Putting Amazon.com vs. the RIAA into perspectiv by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're comparing apples & oranges. If you want apples & apples you need to look at how much $ each entity gave towards the restriction of your rights to use something you've purchased in the way you want to.

    I suspect you'll find the RIAA has been bribing.. er.. I mean lobbying much more :)

  74. Re:Putting Amazon.com vs. the RIAA into perspectiv by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    party A's monetary resources > party B's monetary resources
    _______________________________________________-
    (therefore) Party A will win in court.

    I know! Isn't that great!?!

  75. Re:Putting Amazon.com vs. the RIAA into perspectiv by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am not so sure. Doesn't the RIAA have a multi-trillion dollar lawsuit payout waiting to happen? :)

  76. Media licensing by Larry_Dillon · · Score: 1

    The record companies aren't willing to admit it, but they make a lot of money selling replacement CD's when a CD becomes lost, stolen or otherwise unplayable. I suspect that they have made a lot of money selling replacement MP3's when the device holding it gets damaged or otherwise unusable, or when DRM prevents playback on a new device.

    If this cloud service keeps people from having to repurchase content, the record companies stand to lose a lot of money.

    I've often wondered why it's usually impossible to get replacement media when a CD is damaged. After all, what you really did was license the music, at least according to the RIAA. Damaged media doesn't negate your license to the "intellectual property" that you purchased.

    Look at how different software is. If I buy a Windows server license, there's a media kit for a nominal fee. If the media becomes unusable, I just get another media kit and reuse the license.

    It seems that the record companies want the good (for them) stuff that comes with licensing but not the rest of the bargain.

    --
    Competition Good, Monopoly Bad.
  77. Re:Putting Amazon.com vs. the RIAA into perspectiv by future+assassin · · Score: 1

    I would pay so see this public fly swatting you speak of. PPV Amazon vs Dead Business Model.

    --
    by TheSpoom (715771) Uncaring Linux user here. I have nothing to add to this but please continue. *munches popcorn*
  78. And The Music Industry States: "NOM NOM!!!" by curado · · Score: 1

    Why doesn't the RIAA set up direct debit so they can just skip court and take the money straight out of everyone's bank accounts?

  79. Doing It Wrong by dhermann · · Score: 1

    You guys are missing the point. Amazon knows exactly what happened to MP3.com, and, regardless of what our intrepid online industry journalists tell us, Amazon is absolutely not suiting up to go to the mats against the recording industry in open court. That's crazy.

    Instead, they see two fantastic outs for them: first, since Google and Apple are now behind the curve, both of them will go crazy trying to finalize their licensing agreements with the industry so they can release their locker services. Every moment they wait will be another customer lost because he or she is intractably set up in Amazon's cloud and reluctant to switch, both for the inconvenience and the upfront payments of a yearly subscription. When they finally do come up with licensing, Amazon need only say, "Well, just give us whatever you gave to Google and Apple and we'll sign up."

    Or, if the RIAA moves faster than that (files an injunction or something), all Amazon needs to do is show them their magnificently profitable business model and amazing infrastructure and say, "You could sue our pants off for a decent amount of money and we can shut this down, or you can sit down with us and we can figure out a way so we both can make even more money over an infinite period of time."

    Amazon knows what's coming. They're just betting that the recording industry has figured out how much money they lost in the last decade trying to stick with their traditional goods model and is willing to try something progressive.

    1. Re:Doing It Wrong by mlts · · Score: 1

      It may backfire on them though. If Amazon does draw back a stump, it will give the RIAA better ammunition to go against Google and Apple's negotiations, demand more money, and have more stipulations (DRM) on anything stored on their service. Perhaps fees to charge the user per song streamed as well as forcing a proprietary music client where the music can only be streamed through it.

      Don't think the RIAA is a dying business model. They have managed to score some critical victories. For example, independent net radio is pretty much dead because of them and the license fee hikes.

    2. Re:Doing It Wrong by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but that's still a win for Amazon, since the other two can't scoop them on it. It's dicey as Amazon is going it alone, and if they win, it's also a win for G/A, but I'm guessing they figure it's worth the investment for the potential returns.

      --
      Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
  80. Look at the statute by Theaetetus · · Score: 3, Informative

    Do I need a license to stream MP3s from system RAM to the MP3 player? From my Hard Drive to RAM? From my File Server to my machine?

    17 USC 117(a): "... it is not an infringement for the owner of a copy of a computer program to make or authorize the making of another copy or adaptation of that computer program provided: (1) that such a new copy or adaptation is created as an essential step in the utilization of the computer program in conjunction with a machine and that it is used in no other manner."

    So, no.

    And before you start arguing that MP3s aren't computer programs:
    17 USC 101: "A “computer program” is a set of statements or instructions to be used directly or indirectly in a computer in order to bring about a certain result."

    1. Re:Look at the statute by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Though there is the wrinkle that you aren't streaming audio from the server to your headphones. You're streaming it to a storage device, and then the storage device is streaming it from there to your headphones, so they could still argue that it's a "broadcast" going from the server to your device and hence needs a different type of license.

    2. Re:Look at the statute by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

      17 USC 101: "A “computer program” is a set of statements or instructions to be used directly or indirectly in a computer in order to bring about a certain result."

      I know you mean well, but MP3s aren't computer programs, even by that definition. MP3s are data without any decoding instructions. They are no more programs than is a phonebook.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    3. Re:Look at the statute by Theaetetus · · Score: 1

      17 USC 101: "A “computer program” is a set of statements or instructions to be used directly or indirectly in a computer in order to bring about a certain result."

      I know you mean well, but MP3s aren't computer programs, even by that definition. MP3s are data without any decoding instructions. They are no more programs than is a phonebook.

      Yep. They're kinda like a set of statements to be used indirectly in a computer in order to bring about a certain result.

    4. Re:Look at the statute by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

      Yep. They're kinda like a set of statements to be used indirectly in a computer in order to bring about a certain result.

      No. They are exactly a set of values to be fed into a set of statements that are designed to interpret them. "Statement" has specific meanings in law, programming, and logic, none of which map to "a data series".

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    5. Re:Look at the statute by Theaetetus · · Score: 1

      Yep. They're kinda like a set of statements to be used indirectly in a computer in order to bring about a certain result.

      No. They are exactly a set of values to be fed into a set of statements that are designed to interpret them. "Statement" has specific meanings in law, programming, and logic, none of which map to "a data series".

      From your link for a legal definition of "statement": "An oral or written assertion or (2) nonverbal conduct of a person, if it is intended by the person as an assertion."

      And from the statute I quoted: "A “computer program” is a set of statements or instructions to be used directly or indirectly in a computer in order to bring about a certain result."

      Now, let me get this straight... You think that when Congress wrote both of those (since the sole legal definition you cited is from Chapter 28 of the US Code), they meant that a computer program is set of oral or written assertions or nonverbal conduct of a person, intended by an assertion?

      'Cause wow. I mean, really... Wow.

      Anyways, sorry, you're wrong. Congress may be stupid, but they aren't as stupid as that assertion. The "legal" definition you're citing to is the definition of an evidentiary statement from the federal rules of civil and criminal procedure. That is distinct from the definition in 17 USC, in which it stands in contradistinction to an "instruction". The statements are "the set of values to be fed into a set of instructions that are designed to interpret them."

    6. Re:Look at the statute by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

      I may not be a legal expert, but at least I'm not the one mistaking "statements" and "data". Are you an HTML programmer, perhaps?

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
  81. Re:Putting Amazon.com vs. the RIAA into perspectiv by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who would have guessed we would need corporate overlords to defend the rights of their customers, because they want to sell more services?

  82. Alrighty then by reboot246 · · Score: 1

    If the RIAA wants me to pay for even thinking about hearing a song, then conversely, can I charge them every time I hear music that I don't want to hear? After all, it's their product that is invading my personal space uninvited!

    Either that or I get permission to kick the dude's ass who is playing his car radio too damned loud.

  83. Re:Putting Amazon.com vs. the RIAA into perspectiv by mlts · · Score: 1

    Amazon doesn't have judges that were ex-Amazon employees or consultants. The RIAA can easily get venue changes to steer cases into courtrooms that are sympathetic to their cause. Amazon may be big and have some decent lobby muscle, but the RIAA has been after copy-protection with legal cases for over a century.

  84. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  85. Re:Putting Amazon.com vs. the RIAA into perspectiv by Jason+Levine · · Score: 2

    Worst case, they go scorched earth and quit selling that label's albums for a week. Every artist on the label's roster will freak. Investors will panic. Blood in the streets.

    One more point. Unlike some pure-music shop, Amazon's revenue comes from a variety of sources. If Sony told Amazon "You can't sell Sony music anymore", it would be a hit in revenue, but Amazon has enough other revenue sources that it would be a small one. Meanwhile, if Amazon told Sony, "We're not stocking Sony music anymore", your scenario above would result. The labels are trying a power play on a player with more power than them. Pass the popcorn, this should be fun to watch.

    --
    My sci-fi novel, Ghost Thief, is now available from Amazon.com.
  86. What colo(u)r are your bits? by mhotchin · · Score: 1

    http://ansuz.sooke.bc.ca/entry/23

    Or, "Provenance matters".

  87. Re:Single Instance Storage by indeterminator · · Score: 1

    if i had to guess then i'd say that when you upload your music to amazon they dedupe it so that it only takes a tiny amount of space. and technically it's a separate file so they can just argue that they are providing cloud storage and you're streaming your unique content. when in the end it's all deduped common data.

    They can keep deduping and get around the whole argument by deduping at hardware or filesystem block level, instead of comparing complete files. That way, they can just call it a compression algorithm.

  88. Re:Putting Amazon.com vs. the RIAA into perspectiv by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    America! Fuck yeah!

  89. beat it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't raise up what you can't put down.
    Obligatory goatkcd

  90. Lawyers? by poptones · · Score: 1

    Last I looked, the opinion of "many lawyers" in courtrooms had about as much legal power as "the opinion of poptones."

    If you're going to cite these things you should take a minute to actually read them. "Betamax," for example, did not rule that copying television programs and movies for one's home library was not a violation of copyright - it clearly says otherwise, in fact - but it said this was clearly not a violation that was in any practical sense enforceable or, individually and by itself, harmful to the industry.

    creating an online service specifically for the storage and playback of unlicensed music - and creating a business model from that - is exactly the sort of thing that has been shut down in case after case.

  91. One step at a time. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Do I need a license to stream MP3s from system RAM to the MP3 player? From my Hard Drive to RAM? From my File Server to my machine?

    Don't jump the gun, here. Let the RIAA worry about getting money for those things after all the low hanging fruit has been taken care of.

  92. Dropbox? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can upload to my dropbox and stream from there or share it with friends. No license.

  93. Re:Putting Amazon.com vs. the RIAA into perspectiv by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Interesting how you predict the outcome of a court battle from the revenues of each contender; it tells a lot about your legal system.

  94. Would this be a better approach? by RexDevious · · Score: 1

    The most profitable model I've ever heard of for music was the jukebox. 25 cents to listen to a song, whether or not you owned it, regardless of how many times you've played it - and all without the guarantee that it would even play before you left the establishment. And I don't remember anyone complaining about the cost.

    So what if there was a service which functioned as a jukebox, but with a monthly service fee instead of a per song fee. Now, there's nothing revolutionary about that of course, plenty of attempts have been made at doing just that. The problem with those models is that they didn't have enough content to automatically entice users to discover (and hence pay to listen to) enough new music to make it profitable.

    But if you had a large enough library that you could create various types of iTunes-type genius playlists based on things like:
    2nd favourite songs of people who listed the same favourite song as you
    Songs/albums manually suggested by the actual artist of the song you're listening to

    It would take both a tremendous amount of content to generate truly successful recommendations, as well as way of uploading records of your preferences/familiarity from various music programs such as iTunes xml.

    In addition to that, there would be ample upselling opportunities - a section displaying available live concerts from the artist playing, a section for merchandise from the artist, maybe even sections for music learning products such as video lessons which included the song being played, or learning materials created by the artist. With enough users, and the ubiquitous face book links, sections could be created where people could join others wishing to carpool a local concert (and or chaperons for minors wishing to attend).

    Again, I'm aware that all the capabilities exist in spades across all the various balkanized music services; but none of them have every gotten enough cooperation from music publishers to achieve the critical mass necessary to add sufficient value to make people comfortable paying a monthly fee to possibly do little more than listen to what might be in their own library with greater ease of use.

    As for the licensing fees for the music, the monthly fee's net profit could easily be proportioned to actually publishers of the music that was heard.

    Full disclosure: a big part of the motivation for wanting to see a service like this succeed, is to finally drive music profits to the artists creating the music people listen to. Right now, the artists making money are the ones that are popular among people who don't know how to get music for free; not the artists that are popular among people who are actually listening to music. This would also have the effect of driving home the value of albums or songs that people keep listening to years after their release, hopefully nudging the music industry into investing more in artists that have more going for them than nice tits and a copy of Antares auto-tune.

  95. Is it just me with ubes rub bandwidth? by zmollusc · · Score: 1

    I think that trying to use this service will show up the crummy upload speeds of their broadband. I reckon uploading 10 albums will max out my upstream for a week.

    --
    They whose government reduces their essential liberties for temporary security, receive neither liberty nor security.
  96. It's the story of the leader and his sheep. by Evi1M4chine · · Score: 1

    Obviously the media mafia says yes. It’s like when some senator said that we should let companies decide which amount of taxes they should pay. As Jon Steward did put it: "Weeel... let me see... it is rouuuund (*draws a circle in the air with his finger*)... and it has a hooole in the middle...".

    Fact is: If you ask someone else what you "should" do, they will tell you what they want to have. Duh.
    What is good for you, is to ask what's in it for you. This includes those that you care for.

    In my case,
    I care for me and my friends... and free music is best for them...
    and for great artists... and maximum rewards is best for them.
    In no case is the media reproduction and artist extortion mafia even related to those that I care for.
    So my rule is to... GIVE. THEM. NOTHING! BUT. TAKE. FROM. THEM. EEEVERYTHING!
    (Then give much of that to artists so they can make free music for me and my friends.)

    --
    I must be some kind of leader... Since Slashdot is following me to the grave. ;)
  97. Re:Putting Amazon.com vs. the RIAA into perspectiv by Paska · · Score: 1

    Wasn't it $75 trillion? The other 2 trillion must have gotten tied up in RIAA accounting practices.

  98. The problem will occur (for Amazon)... by southlander · · Score: 1

    .. When there are services that automate sharing login credentials for accessing one drive by many "users". Sorta like how there are sites that store and give out logins to get around paywalls for new sites. Amazon will have to police this and shut it down immediately. Or else it gives the music industry a possible argument to say that Amazon is facilitating piracy.

  99. Re:Putting Amazon.com vs. the RIAA into perspectiv by iainl · · Score: 1

    A week? For the duration of the case would be fair, I feel.

    --
    "I Know You Are But What Am I?"
  100. Re:Asinine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    - and they'll probably call it Asi9 :o)

  101. Deduplication will definitely happen by admiral201 · · Score: 1

    "In that case the website stored one copy of each piece of music, required the user to verify they owned it, then allowed you access to their stored copy."

    In the case of modern storage systems, this is almost certainly what will happen "behind the scenes" at Amazon. They will probably use a storage system which will be calculating hashes of each file or block, and deduplicating data invisibly, and hence having a vastly larger logical storage space than physical. So, in essence, if 10,000,000 store the same 10 MB MP3 file, it will only use 10MB (plus metadata, perhaps another 500MB? WAG) of actual storage. However, logically each user has a separate file. If I modify my copy's tags, it will "copy on write" and I will now have my own copy, causing Amazon to store more actual data.

    On another topic, I personally would be extraordinarily wary of this service. (Or, for that matter, every single cloud-based storage service.) The RIAA, MPAA, or whoever now just needs to subpoena Amazon and ask for a copy of all their stored data for all users to go on a fishing expedition, rather than having to subpoena every user in the world. I'm sure Amazon would fight that, but who knows who would prevail?

    If Amazon encrypted the data on the client-side and streamed only encrypted data, that might be better (no fishing expeditions possible without also breaking the encryption), as the data on Amazon's side would thus be gibberish. However, that would also mean they'd have a 1-1 mapping of logical to physical storage, and thus prohibitively expensive storage costs.