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Who Killed Spotify?

An anonymous reader writes "The BBC reports that ad-supported music service Spotify is bringing strict limits to its service, allowing users ten hours listening time per month and a lifetime total of five plays per track. Rory Cellan-Jones discusses how much their hand was forced by the labels, and how much it was down to their own desire to move more than the current 15% of users to their paid subscriptions. The overwhelming reaction from users seems to be straightforward disappointment at the loss of a service which managed to bridge the commercial radio business model and modern listening habits. As the first response to the announcement said: 'So long Spotify. It was nice knowing you. Guess I'll go back to pirating music again then.'"

257 comments

  1. Only to free by mccalli · · Score: 4, Informative

    Limits to its free service, not to Spotify in general. I've been a paying subscriber for a while and it's fine.

    Must admit though that I cancelled my subscription last week. Wasn't anything wrong with the service, which is a good one, was simply that I found I wasn't using it nearly as much as I thought I might.

    Cheers,
    Ian

    1. Re:Only to free by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      See that's the thing though. Radio is free, so the idea of paying for radio-like services like Spotify and Pandora go against a lot of people's ways. Some people will see the benefit in pay services, but the vast majority won't. It's like the free TV vs. paid cable argument in the...what, 80's?

    2. Re:Only to free by hedwards · · Score: 1

      I've heard that spotify is a great service, but they still haven't managed to launch in the US, I can only wonder if this has something to do with them trying to broaden their availability in regions not yet supported.

    3. Re:Only to free by poetmatt · · Score: 3, Informative
    4. Re:Only to free by slim · · Score: 1

      Spotify is less radio-like than Pandora.

      Spotify allows you to pick a song and play it -- something which Pandora (last time I tried it) does not. Indeed, I think Pandora's weighted-random personal radio station is a legal hack, so that they're classed as a radio station rather than something else.

      Spotify really is like having an iTunes with a vast library.

    5. Re:Only to free by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe for older people who remember when radio actually had cutting edge stuff. Now if most [1] radio stations out there were replaced with a small PC that primarily streamed ads, randomly played a track out of 100 stored on a SD card, with station identification every so often, and a recorded news blurb once in a while, nobody would know the difference.

      People tend to do one of three things:

      1: Let the media decide what they listen to, thus the Justin Bieber CDs and American Idol comps.

      2: Use friends and DJs to find new stuff.

      3: Find new stuff on Pandora/last.fm/other service.

      In reality, there is no "free" way to find new bands these days. Radio is useless unless you are one of those people who wants to listen to the same exact playlist the station was doing 15-20 years ago.

      [1]: There are still a few independent ones which actually play something made this millennium, but they are few and far between compared to the cookie cutter ones locked in a time loop.

    6. Re:Only to free by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly, I've been pretty much using Spotify as my only music player for 2-3 years and so have many of my friends and europeans in general. It really did kill piracy for me, it's just so convenient and I'm happy to pay for the subscription.

      And I could start ranting about the summary and title again, but.. fuck it, this is what slashdot has become.

    7. Re:Only to free by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Radio is free

      Radio plays crap.

    8. Re:Only to free by HermMunster · · Score: 0

      Paid radio hasn't succeeded it has just survived. Paid Spotify won't pay the bills. This is a death knell for Spotify--they don't know it, but it is.

      --
      You can lead a man with reason but you can't make him think.
    9. Re:Only to free by mikael_j · · Score: 1

      My issue with Spotify is that it doesn't integrate with my existing library.

      This is mainly an issue because most of my favorite music just isn't available through Spotify or there are only a few songs by the band/musician in question available.

      If it would integrate with iTunes so that it preferred the local copy but could be told to use the Spotify copy it'd be extremely nice.

      I actually got Spotify Premium when I bought my current cellphone (free for six months) and so far I've barely used it, I just find myself downloading stuff so I can keep it in the same library as all my other music anyway (because it's a pain in the ass to have to different applications, means I can't use the iTunes Remote app to control it among other things).

      It's a great idea but one-size-fits-all isn't always true.

      --
      Greylisting is to SMTP as NAT is to IPv4
    10. Re:Only to free by cayenne8 · · Score: 1

      Spotify is less radio-like than Pandora.

      Spotify allows you to pick a song and play it -- something which Pandora (last time I tried it) does not. Indeed, I think Pandora's weighted-random personal radio station is a legal hack, so that they're classed as a radio station rather than something else.

      Spotify really is like having an iTunes with a vast library.

      Ok..I guess I don't get this set up then. I like to use Pandora, much like a radio...gives me a nice random play, within a genre....I've been discovering new artists this way, much like with radio when I was a kid.

      If I want to pick and choose my songs from a LARGE music collection that I know I like...I can just use my iPod/iTunes for that.

      I can't see paying money for this..I own a large library if I want to choose, but I prefer a free radio for just different random listening and for discovering new stuff....I don't mind an ad or two for radio, that's what I've grown up with.

      I like pandora and the like...because it is more like the radio when I grew up. Album rock FM back in the day was how I found new and great music whlle driving around town, etc. And back then, well, rock music wasn't as splintered as much as it is now...on the same station back then you could hear Floyd, Jackson Browne, Zeppelin, the Stones and for fun (a bit earlier times) you might get a John Denver song thrown in the mix.

      I miss that and since I work and streaming is blocked most anywhere I've ever worked, I don't have time to go out and hunt through the tons of stuff out there to find a few gems. I like to be able to stream through my iPhone on pandora like the radio of old....

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    11. Re:Only to free by julss · · Score: 1

      Yes it does integrate. File->Import music. It can even directly import your iTunes library, in addition to normally from hard drive.

    12. Re:Only to free by MrAngryForNoReason · · Score: 1

      You can import music into Spotify either just from folders on your hard drive or your entire iTunes library.

      There is information on how this works on the Spotify site : https://www.spotify.com/uk/about/local-music/

    13. Re:Only to free by h4rm0ny · · Score: 1

      Paid Spotify won't pay the bills. This is a death knell for Spotify--they don't know it, but it is.

      What are your figures for this and why do you believe that Spotify don't know something about their business model that you do? The idea that paid spotify wont pay the bills seems rather arbitrary when you consider that a digital service like Spotify can scale up or down its infrastructure and costs according to demand. Costs and demand move in quick step with each other unlike physical manufacturing where if you invest heavily at a certain productivity and demand falls, you may be stuffed.

      I had to scale up a digital service recently (not music). It involved clicking some buttons on a hosting company's website, configuring a server and putting several hundred dollars on my card. In two months time, if I don't need it anymore, I'll cancel. I have cost of X per user, and profit of Y per user. So long as X

      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
    14. Re:Only to free by colinRTM · · Score: 1

      http://www.cd101.com/ Columbus, OH.

      I discovered this radio station when I visited Columbus in 2002 and have been a dedicated fan ever since. Better than almost all of the crap we get over here (western Europe).

    15. Re:Only to free by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    16. Re:Only to free by mikael_j · · Score: 1

      Wrong direction. When I wrote "integrate with iTunes" i meant "into iTunes" not "import the iTunes library".

      --
      Greylisting is to SMTP as NAT is to IPv4
    17. Re:Only to free by mikael_j · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but that's importing the iTunes library into Spotify, not integrating Spotify into iTunes.

      --
      Greylisting is to SMTP as NAT is to IPv4
    18. Re:Only to free by Americano · · Score: 1

      The economics of radio suck if you try to cater to a very narrow segment of interest. That's why you end up with radio stations broadcasting the same Bieber/Idol/Britney compilation over and over again - because it's the lowest common denominator that lots of people will listen to.

      If you're looking for a radio station that plays Bright Eyes and Pavement 24x7, or "Nothing but the Ramones, all day!", you've got a very narrow listening audience, which means your ads will be, generally speaking, a great way to lose money. If you want a customized playlist catered to your individual tastes, you probably need to be prepared to pay some fee for it, because ad-supported simply isn't going to cut it when your market self-segregates into tight little niches.

    19. Re:Only to free by tixxit · · Score: 1

      I use rdio.com, which is available in Canada and the U.S. No free service, but $5/m gives you on-demand music. I'm always worried the labels are going to get greedy and start imposing stupid restrictions, even on paying customers, which would force me to drop the service.

    20. Re:Only to free by b0bby · · Score: 1

      I'm old like you, and I also prefer the Pandora model (I'm in the US, but tried Spotify via vpn to check it out). I guess that Spotify is for the youth who don't have huge music collections already - I ripped my 400+ CDs when I went digital, I was all over Audiogalaxy, I have a lot of music on local storage. I like Pandora because it helps me hear new stuff, and I don't have the time these days to be making compilations and playlists. For $36 a year, it's like Netflix for me - sure I could download all this stuff, but it's convenient and reasonably priced, and ad free, so I subscribe.

    21. Re:Only to free by Fizzl · · Score: 2

      But who the fuck wants to use iTunes?

    22. Re:Only to free by MoonBuggy · · Score: 1

      Limits to its free service, not to Spotify in general. I've been a paying subscriber for a while and it's fine.

      I tend to draw a distinction between free and ad-supported (and the summary does mention the latter) - it's less like they were giving content away, more that they were trading it for revenue generated by ad views, just like Hulu, commercial radio, many TV stations, and so forth. A subtle point, perhaps, but one I think is important.

      As for their paid service, I'm considering a subscription (although being forced to do so by this kind of manoeuvre does grate just as a matter of principle - I'd rather not show them that screwing the free service is a good business model) but I really, really dislike the fact that they charge a recurring fee for features which present them with little or no recurring cost; Hulu are guilty of the same, incidentally. I don't mind paying a subscription for access to the content itself (and the upstream bandwidth I consume from their data centre), but having to pay double the price for the privilege of accessing it on my phone just seems unreasonable. If they're that worried about dev costs (something I find unlikely), charge a one time fee for the app, or just open the API and let the community handle it. Don't charge me £5/month for access to the content in general, and then another £5 for the privilege of accessing it from a particular class of device.

    23. Re:Only to free by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      spotify has never been available here because the organization that handles copyrights can't agree with spotify on pricing. but there seem so be hope now
      the new head of the copyright organization has just said that arguing over the price of something like spotity is like arguing with the wife over who gets the water while the house is on fire

    24. Re:Only to free by Endophage · · Score: 1

      GrooveShark is an excellent US alternative to spotify and apart from one or two labels who's items don't appear in the library (most notably Pink Floyd) they have legal arrangements with most of the big labels. Certainly you can find any recent hits on there and a significant collection of more classic (and classical if you want) music.

    25. Re:Only to free by mikael_j · · Score: 1

      Mac users?

      Also, people who like the "library paradigm" (as opposed to the previously dominant "directory structure and a bunch of playlists", "directory structure and just add the files you want to listen to now from the directory structure every time and use 'j' in Winamp to find the song you're looking for" and of course the "no sorting whatsoever, just dump whatever you want right now into Winamp" paradigms of music sorting that were popular for a long time).

      And finally there's the fact that if you own an iPhone, an iPad or an iPod those sync through iTunes and it's actually easier to just use iTunes than to either try to use a 3rd party solution just for the sake of it or to do the whole "Oh I normally use foobar/winamp/whatever, I only use iTunes for syncing" thing.

      That said, I would probably not use iTunes if my only computer was running Windows and didn't have decent specs, for some reason the Windows version of iTunes is much more sluggish than the OS X version...

      --
      Greylisting is to SMTP as NAT is to IPv4
    26. Re:Only to free by bemymonkey · · Score: 1

      You're aware that the "library paradigm" you describe is available on, well, pretty much EVERY other player available for PC OS's, right? Even Winamp has a media library (which happens to be much, much more customizable than iTunes')... Songbird, Foobar, Mediamonkey, WMP, Amarok... need I go on?

    27. Re:Only to free by mikael_j · · Score: 1

      These days? Yes, it is. However, for the longest time it wasn't.

      Well, more specifically there were quite a few apps that did have it except they:

      • Didn't integrate with your mp3 player/phone (minor point, yes).
      • Only had the library as an afterthought (meaning most users didn't really use it anyway).
      • Were horribly unstable (the Winamp library was infamous for crashing if you just looked at it funny).
      • Were user unfriendly (meaning that using the library function was clunky at best and just continuing to treat your music collection as a bunch of files in directories made more sense).

      Basically, iTunes was one of the first music players to actually have a decent implementation of the "library paradigm". This coupled with my earlier points make it a perfectly valid option for those running OS X. If I used Windows I would not be using iTunes.

      --
      Greylisting is to SMTP as NAT is to IPv4
  2. Go Premium by larppaxyz · · Score: 1

    I never even tried free version of Spotify. I don't like commercials, but biggest reason was that with premium account (10€/month) i have better bitrate, great mobile client and offline listening.

    After just few weeks of using Sporify, i deleted my MP3 collection. This is first time i ever pay for music.

    1. Re:Go Premium by wiedzmin · · Score: 2

      Daniel Ek, is that you?

      --
      Bow before me, for I am root.
    2. Re:Go Premium by TyFoN · · Score: 1

      Ditto. In addition I can have my wifes mobile phone on my subscription as well without extra cost.

    3. Re:Go Premium by larppaxyz · · Score: 1

      Sorry, after re-reading my post, it really does look like a commercial. But it's all true, trust me... TRUE!

    4. Re:Go Premium by gknoy · · Score: 1

      I think the same thing about DI.fm. I listen to the free one, but they often have commercials for the high-quality streams. If I listened at home, I'd be more tempted to pay for it, but for now the cheap stream is nice.

    5. Re:Go Premium by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You must like crappy music then. I treasure my collection.

    6. Re:Go Premium by Jugalator · · Score: 1

      I agree with you, except that I don't need the high bitrate and mobile support, and get away with half the price. :)

      It's not that bad IMHO to pay $8/month for unlimited access to that music library. At least not enough to speak of Spotify being "killed". It's far better than anything you could get in the nineties, or even early 2000's, so I still think that this is definitely progress in the right direction. Yes, you don't get to "own" your music, but I consider it like I do with movie visits or (back in the bad old days) visits to music stores to buy CD's more or less regularly.

      Similar yearly cost, but much more convenient.

      --
      Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
    7. Re:Go Premium by oldmac31310 · · Score: 1

      10 euro per month is an awful lot of money to pay for music! It just doesn't seem quite right.

      --
      http://www.acetonestudio.com
    8. Re:Go Premium by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Remember, this is not just Slashdot, but the internet itself. Simply liking something non-ironically is tantamount to being a corporate shill. You have to specify all your preferences in levels of nerd rage hatred, else nobody will ever believe you.

    9. Re:Go Premium by KillAllNazis · · Score: 1

      Especially if you listen to the same album multiple times.

    10. Re:Go Premium by MrAngryForNoReason · · Score: 1

      If you compare it to something like a LoveFilm or Netflix account where you pay £10-£15 a month and can only have a limited number of DVDs at once then it is really good value. You have access to any music in the Spotify library which is incredibly extensive and you can download it and carry it around on your phone or when you are out of the country.

      Being able to listen to anything from a massive library of music as much as you want including on mobile devices for the price of maybe 2 cds seems pretty cheap to me.

    11. Re:Go Premium by h4rm0ny · · Score: 1

      Don't have to trust you - I'm another paying customer. Honestly, I pay the £10 per month to get pretty much any music I've ever heard of almost instantly available. And if you don't want the high bit-rate or mobile service, it's half that. High bit-rate is 320Kbps Ogg, standard is, from memory, 160kbps, so unless you have good speakers, you might not even care about the bit rate.

      Trust Slashdot to highlight the "So long, guess I'll go back to pirating music comment". Honestly - is it really that horrifyingly out of whack to charge £5 a month for endless music? I don't think many people have the right to be outraged about someone wanting £5 a month for that. It just makes them sound stupid and / or greedy.

      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
    12. Re:Go Premium by h4rm0ny · · Score: 1

      €10 a month isn't an "awful lot of money" to most people. It's the price of a pizza and a beer. I'm not going to pick on people to whom it is a lot of money. But I would certainly tell people who have that money available for other things but somehow value music so low that they think this is overpriced, that their expectations are skewed. You'd probably pay around this to rent a couple of movies over a month. And this you can listen to 24/7.

      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
    13. Re:Go Premium by geekoid · · Score: 1

      "out of whack to charge £5 a month for endless music?"

      Yes.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    14. Re:Go Premium by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Well, it kind of depends on there cost and value compared to competitors.

      I wish people would stop comparing music to movies. There different things.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    15. Re:Go Premium by markxz · · Score: 1

      It was the BBC news (Funded in the UK by a compulsory [for those with TVs that can receive broadcast programming] subscription/tax) article that highlighted the "So long, guess I'll go back to pirating music" comment.

    16. Re:Go Premium by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For the price of pizza and beer you get pizza and beer. If you buy spotify you get a "virtual service".

    17. Re:Go Premium by prockcore · · Score: 1

      Netflix streaming-only accounts are $8/mo, or 5 euros.

    18. Re:Go Premium by h4rm0ny · · Score: 1

      It was the BBC news (Funded in the UK by a compulsory [for those with TVs that can receive broadcast programming] subscription/tax) article that highlighted the "So long, guess I'll go back to pirating music" comment.

      Both the BBC and Slashdot did.

      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
    19. Re:Go Premium by h4rm0ny · · Score: 1

      Okay. If you feel £5 a month is unreasonable for endless music, two questions. One, what would you say is a reasonable price for endless music? Two, do you feel that endless music is of less value than, for example, a pizza and a beer once a month, a couple of movie rentals once a month, a few pairs of socks from a department store each month?A couple of pre-packed sandwiches from a supermarket or local deli? Music is a luxury good, not a necessity, so it's easy to compare it to lots of other things and see how it rates. I honestly believe that anyone making the argument that £5 a month is too much, who isn't actually hard up for money (i.e. they spend money on other things they don't require), is really not going to impress anyone with their position.

      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
    20. Re:Go Premium by h4rm0ny · · Score: 1

      For the price of pizza and beer you get pizza and beer. If you buy spotify you get a "virtual service".

      What's virtual about it? I pay the money and music comes out of my speakers. If you'll pardon me for the phrasing, it sounds pretty real to me.

      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
    21. Re:Go Premium by h4rm0ny · · Score: 1

      Well, it kind of depends on there cost and value compared to competitors

      No, that determines whether they are the best deal. What determines whether or not they are worth purchasing a service from, is whether you value the service. Suzuki might offer great cost and value compared to Harley Davidson, but unless I'm in the market for a motorbike, it's irrelevant.

      I wish people would stop comparing music to movies. There different things.

      It's not useful to compare things to themselves! You have to compare them to something else. In order to show other things that you could get for the same money, I picked on rented movies. I could pick a lot of other examples, too. The idea is to try and gauge the value of €10 so that the cost of streaming music can be properly calibrated. Not everyone values renting movies. Some people might value beer and I could have said: it's the cost of a couple of beers. But enough people rent movies that it's a decent enough tool to use to draw a value comparison. 10 is just a number. It could be a lot or a little. By pegging other items that are found at position "10" however, we can get a feel for where 10 is on the scale of things.

      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
    22. Re:Go Premium by MoonBuggy · · Score: 1

      But I would certainly tell people who have that money available for other things but somehow value music so low that they think this is overpriced, that their expectations are skewed.

      One of the key thing that skews the value is Spotify's own choice of pricing structure. The music is priced at £5/month (in the UK, at least), but the music plus the right to listen to it on a device running an OS other than Windows/OSX is £10/month. In absolute terms that extra £5 is not a huge amount, I know, but it makes me reluctant to buy the basic subscription (since it's lacking mobile play, a feature I would like) and reluctant to buy the premium subscription (since it's double the price, forever, for the use of a basic mobile app that presented a one-time cost to develop).

    23. Re:Go Premium by h4rm0ny · · Score: 1

      Well software makes selling "different products" often just a case of enabling or disabling different features so the only way to differentiate different licensing terms is with these sorts of limitations. Market differentiation can be a good thing. Instead of everyone paying £8, some can pay £5 and some can pay £10. Nobody's paying for more than they need and nobody's free-loading off those who would be paying for features they didn't want. I'm not saying this is always the perfect case once marketing people get hold of it, but the idea is sound and a useful one. If you were buying something physical and you bought a more expensive version with extra features you needed, you wouldn't feel cheated because you'd look at the extra bits and think "this cost more to produce than the version without these features". With digital products, those limitations seem arbitrary, but it's just a matter of perception: it still took more to add those extra features and they still add value and pricing is still based on people buying that which they want.

      Slight correction, btw. The £5 version is available for Linux. I know because I had it. Though I upgraded to Premium to get the better bit-rates.

      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
    24. Re:Go Premium by MoonBuggy · · Score: 1

      I see your point, but I don't think your analogy quite holds; it's not software price discrimination in general I object to, it's specifically being charged a recurring fee for a feature that presents a non-recurring expense to the company. I know it's not the biggest issue in the world, it's just one I find bloody annoying. There's normally at least some correspondence between costs to the company (including research and development costs to recoup) and price to the consumer - price gouging laws exist specifically to enforce that correspondence.

      If a piece of software has extra features, it cost time and effort to code those features - that time and effort needs to be offset some how, so your "£5 for some, £10 for others, rather than £8 for everybody" argument holds. In the case of Spotify, the artificial limitations prevent you from using either the official apps, or even third party clients developed using the open API, unless you're on the £10 plan; the dev costs of the apps were, I'm willing to bet, negligible, but if they really wanted to push the issue then I wouldn't object too much to being charged a one-off fee to purchase the app for my device. Similarly, allowing people to connect via the API would present no extra cost to Spotify, so there would be no reason for it to push the price from £5 to £8. Like I said, not a major issue, but the kind of irritation that just nags at me.

    25. Re:Go Premium by perryizgr8 · · Score: 1

      di.fm does not play any mainstream tracks though. that might be a problem for many people.
      for people like me who just want trance, its amazing!! many djs usually post download links to their mixes in the forums! i'm unsure about the legality of this, but i can testify that it is AWESOME!

      --
      Wealth is the gift that keeps on giving.
    26. Re:Go Premium by perryizgr8 · · Score: 1

      Honestly - is it really that horrifyingly out of whack to charge £5 a month for endless music?

      yes. considering the fact that i'm paying for the non-unlimited data connection too. and how can someone not need mobile service? i don't listen to music while sitting at my pc. i listen when i'm on the move, or maybe sitting in the library doing math.

      --
      Wealth is the gift that keeps on giving.
  3. Who Killed Spotify...? by ZaMoose · · Score: 1

    ...When after all, it was you and me.

    --
    I wish I had a kryptonite cross, because then you could keep Dracula and Superman away.
    1. Re:Who Killed Spotify...? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It was Jonathan with a monotonic voice.

    2. Re:Who Killed Spotify...? by MrAngryForNoReason · · Score: 1

      Oh god yes. My only complaint about the ads on Spotify free is the monotone voice announcements, not sure what it is about his American accent that is so robotic! Get an English voice actor and the ads would be so much less annoying.

  4. Labels ask for money! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Film at 11.

  5. Totally worth it by Zoolander · · Score: 1

    I can't see how people can be upset about this. The Spotify social feature is awesome, and if you skip one lunch out per month, you've paid for the subscription.

    --
    Meep.
    1. Re:Totally worth it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course, not there will be less people to be social with.

  6. Yup by Anrego · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Guess I'll go back to pirating music again then

    I know this attitude well. Being Canadian, it's even worse here.

    I try to buy media, and would love to be able to legitimately buy various movies and TV shows online, but thanks to the CBC/CRTC, they can't be made available here thanks to some very backwards and broken laws.

    So you browse say, netflix or itunes (ugh.. but meh). Find something you want. Money (figuratively) sitting in my pocket, theirs for the taking .. NOPE! DON'T WANT IT! But please stop pirating because it's costing us money! Oh, here is a show made in the 80's with a 1 and a half star rating who's title contains one word from your query.. THAT we can give you! *froths at mouth*

    1. Re:Yup by cob666 · · Score: 1

      I know this is off topic but I agree with you 100%. I live in the States but travel to Canada frequently enough that I have both a US and a Canadian Netflix account. I'm appalled by how smaller the Netflix selection is in Canada compared to what I can watch in the US.

      --
      Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law - Aleister Crowley
    2. Re:Yup by xtracto · · Score: 1

      Same thing happens to me, only for Hulu or Jinni... Quite often after looking for something to see I find myself in a webpage that says "sorry but this service is only available in the USA"... I have my credit card in my wallet and I am happy to pay but a lot of times paying is actually *NOT* an option so I usually look for the movie on filestube... which is a shame.

      --
      Ubuntu is an African word meaning 'I can't configure Debian'
    3. Re:Yup by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

      This has nothing to do with laws but only to do with studios licensing their stuff. I've been with them since the first month they came out. Have to say, that the Canadian selection while still not great, is quite a bit better than it used to be, and getting better every week. I'm sure in a year or two they'll be up to just as much stuff as the US. Until that time, i'm still happy to support a business model that I really like, even if I only watch 4 movies a month for my $8. Still cheaper and more convenient than renting.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    4. Re:Yup by gmack · · Score: 1

      It is not the CRTC or Canadian Law that stops shows from being available in Canada. It's the regional licensing systems the entertainment industry has that that require negotiating separately for each region that sites like Netflix want to make the content available in.

      Often you can't even go to a single source either because often the same content has different corporations to manage it depending on country or continent. Scrabble is a fantastic example of that: British scrabble players can't play North American players when using the official Facebook Scrabble apps because the two corporations that hold the rights couldn't even get together and agree on a single app.

    5. Re:Yup by Retardical_Sam · · Score: 1

      While I'm glad they are expanding the Canadian library, I think back to when Netflix first launched in Canada, and the line they gave to the news outlets was "We know the library isn't as big as in the states, but it's a licensing issue. As we get more customers, we'll add more content. So pay us now, even if our service isn't great, and we'll improve it!".

      Now I'm not as big on the free market as a lot of people, but telling people to pay for a sub-par service so you can afford to improve it is a laughable argument to me. If you want to support their business model, go ahead, but I need more content before I'll pay for it.

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

      That's okay. The Brits would just dominate with all those extra "e"'s and "u"'s.

    7. Re:Yup by Hatta · · Score: 2

      You pay a piracy tax on writeable media in Canada. Since this is (supposedly) used to offset piracy, go ahead and download whatever you want. It's already paid for.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    8. Re:Yup by Hatta · · Score: 2

      It is not the CRTC or Canadian Law that stops shows from being available in Canada. It's the regional licensing systems

      It is Canadian law that makes licensing systems enforceable. Therefore Canadian law is responsible for broken licensing systems.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    9. Re:Yup by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not all writable media.

      Currently, it is 24 cents per audio cassette (which you can't buy anymore -- you can correct me if incorrect) and 29 cents on all blank CD (R, RW) or minidisc.

      Blank DVDs, hard drives, MP3 players, and the sort are exempt from the tax.

      Sources:

      Wikipedia

      If you don't like Wikipedia, you can read it in the mess of legalese in The Canadian Copyright Act C-42.

    10. Re:Yup by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      Wrong. So very wrong. Most of it can be laid at the feet of the CRTC and Cancon. The CRTC for blocking innovation and a increase in the number of competitors in the market. And Cancon for forcing a specific percentage of all broadcasts must contain 'canadian content'.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    11. Re:Yup by gmack · · Score: 1

      At this point that doesn't apply to the Internet. Canadian broadcasters are begging the CRTC to change the rules to change that though.

    12. Re:Yup by Mashiki · · Score: 1

      Indeed they are. Especially after they just ruled that netflix is not a broadcaster. Let me just say, good luck with that.

      --
      Om, nomnomnom...
    13. Re:Yup by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you have both a US and Canadian Netflix account then you have likely had a stroke and are unaware of it because you could save money by just getting a VPN service and then watching your US Netflix in Canada. Plus Hulu... plus everything else from the US.

    14. Re:Yup by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You pay a piracy tax on writeable media in Canada. Since this is (supposedly) used to offset piracy, go ahead and download whatever you want. It's already paid for.

      Just like in Spain. :-/ people gets quite pissed off here with that as well.

    15. Re:Yup by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I try to buy media, and would love to be able to legitimately buy various movies and TV shows online, but thanks to the CBC/CRTC, they can't be made available here thanks to some very backwards and broken laws.

      Look people need to get their facts straight. The laws you are refering to the CRTC Canadian content laws, which I believe is what you are making reference to, only apply to broadcasting eg. radio and TV. TThe CRTC has deliberately taken a hands-off approach towards internet distribution, I will make this simple, Canadian content laws DO NOT apply to media distributed over the internet. NETFLIX having less selection here than in the states is all due to content companies.

      Please do a little more research next time before you go yelling get the gubermint out of it.

    16. Re:Yup by sixsixtysix · · Score: 1

      it is because of out-dated licensing systems. one net, one license or gtfo.

      --
      ...
    17. Re:Yup by RogerWilco · · Score: 1

      I really like Spotify. I have a reasonable mp3 collection, most of which I ripped from CDs. But the nice thing about Spotify is that it allows you to make temporary playlists on a whim. Like for example last summer I wanted to listen to some African music because I got inspired by the football world cup in South Africa. I only knew a few, and then I found many more by looking at what Spotify suggested were similar artists.
      Same thing with a colleague from India I carpooled with for a while. He taught me a lot about Indian classical music by playing around with Spotify on my iPhone and while I was driving. (yay for car stereo with an iPod connector). My playlist of French music was created in a similar way.

      Guess I'll go back to pirating music again then

      Well, if you're not planning to pay for it, then I suppose you're exactly the kind of "customer" Spotify wants to get rid of.

      I know this attitude well. Being Canadian, it's even worse here.

      I try to buy media, and would love to be able to legitimately buy various movies and TV shows online, but thanks to the CBC/CRTC, they can't be made available here thanks to some very backwards and broken laws.

      Try living in the Netherlands. I got an iPod Video in 2004, when iTunes was supposed to start selling movies and TV shows. Still nothing: There is no way for me to legally buy or rent a movie or TV show online. Not Netflix, Hulu, Amazon, iTunes or any of the others. If I want to legally have access to most of the stuff I want to see, then I have to hope that at some point it gets released in Region 2 on DVD, usually years after it was originally released.

      I really hope that Spotify succeeds as a business model. It really shows even more than iTunes what can be done with the internet. It's especially great over my unlimited data plan on my iPhone, because I can't carry my whole collection of music and/or movies with me. €9,95 a month is peanuts compared to how much I use it.

      Occasionally you find that a song is not on Spotify, but I now have an account for almost a year and it's been great fun, especially to quickly find new kinds of music I didn't know yet if I have one song as an example and then build a playlist by finding similar artists.

      --
      RogerWilco the Adventurous Janitor
  7. Free service only by jcinnamond · · Score: 1

    Spotify is bringing strict limits to its service

    It only costs £4.99 a month for the Unlimited subscription and this comes with the added bonus of no adverts. The kind of people who say 'So long Spotify. It was nice knowing you' are the kind of people who don't want to pay for music. That's their choice of course, but what did they expect? Spotify's price is pretty low and their product is pretty good. The 'free' side of their business doesn't seem sustainable in the long term and I'd rather they focussed on maintaining a sustainable service. And, you know, if you really don't want to pay for music you still don't have to but your free lunch just got smaller. Bummer.

    1. Re:Free service only by slim · · Score: 2

      It was never really free, insofar as it was supported by ads. I'd be interested to know what it is that makes ad-supported Spotify unsustainable, while ad-supported commercial radio continues to be profitable.

      If feels to me (I say "feels" because I have no figures) as if the licensing terms for Internet streaming must be unreasonably high in comparison to radio broadcasting.

      Or, Spotify hasn't convinced enough advertisers that it's a worthwhile channel.

    2. Re:Free service only by Canazza · · Score: 1

      Two words: Phone-ins.
      Also, afaik commercial radio can charge more for their ads because it's a safe medium in the eyes of the advertisers. I can only assume this is true, considering the variety of the adverts I hear on spotify compared to those I hear on the radio. Listening to spotify, I get 1 or two ads every 15-20 minutes (I listen to alot of prog rock, so that's 1 after every track) and there's usually only three or four adverts that aren't spotify information spiels. They do change quite often, but it's mostly Health care ads and GO COMPAAAAARE.

      --
      It pays to be obvious, especially if you have a reputation for being subtle.
    3. Re:Free service only by ZombieWomble · · Score: 2
      Basically that - various sources say that the royalties charged to Spotify per play are on the order of 1p, which very rapidly becomes the dominant cost. If you have a million listeners online, it's about a hundred grand an hour in royalties. That adds up quickly. Other sources (radio, both classic and internet-based) which don't offer on-demand music don't have to pay on a per-listener basis, and so can actually benefit from economies of scale.

      That said, based on Spotify's revenues which they have publicly stated along with subscriber numbers, it looks like they made about 50p in advertising per "free" user over the whole of 2009. While some argue they're paying for their experience with ads, 50p per annum for unlimited streaming music cannot look like a good business proposition to the music industry, and it's hard to say they're being unreasonably greedy by refusing to drop their royalty demands down to that level.

    4. Re:Free service only by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      50p per year for unlimited streaming is about the maximum that I'd be willing to pay.

    5. Re:Free service only by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It was never really free, insofar as it was supported by ads.

      That's like saying air isn't free because you have to, you know, breathe. Of course you and your ilk would know something about that wouldn't you? Close your mouth; you look ridiculous.

    6. Re:Free service only by h4rm0ny · · Score: 2

      50p per year for unlimited streaming is about the maximum that I'd be willing to pay.

      Then you are either phenomenally cheap or your have no interest in streaming music. Neither of which apply to most of the people in this discussion.

      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
  8. Grooveshark by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh no, we'll have to use Grooveshark to steal music now!

  9. petty people by arabagast · · Score: 4, Interesting

    That is just ridicilous. In Norwegian money, one month of spotify membership costs less than a beer bought at a pub*: and the amount of music you have available is excellent. If they really want the radio model with advertisements and a fixed playlist - listen to a goddamn radio station. Spotify is something completely different - you have full controll over what you are listening to.

    *That is for the least expensive option, where you do not have the option to use it on mobile devices. For double this, or about one and a half beer you get the added possibility of installing the spotify application on mobile devices; including offline storage to not tax your wireless data plan.

    --
    Doolittle : ...What is your one purpose in life?
    Bomb no.20 : To explode of course.
    1. Re:petty people by Dan667 · · Score: 1

      spotify is refusing to compete with no draconian limits and play as much as you want. If they want to do well they will have to, that is the reality of the market.

    2. Re:petty people by N1AK · · Score: 1

      That is just ridicilous. In Norwegian money, one month of spotify membership costs less than a beer bought at a pub*:

      In fairness, the price of beer in Norwegian money is fucking ridiculous. The only thing that’s stopped me going for a pay version of spotify is the fact I don’t use it all that much and the catalogue has a number of holes. I can let the holes go, but I can (and do) get better value buying albums with the money I could spend on spotify.

      If it ever gets near £5pm with support for mobiles I’d subscribe without thinking about it.

    3. Re:petty people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree 100%. I subscribed for a few months to try out the mobile offering and see what my usage would be. The end result was that most of my listening time was still music I already owned and my Spotify usage on the go was predominantly one or two albums a month. Which, for the same price, I could just buy and listen to forever.

      £5 (with mobile access) would be the sweet spot. It might sound like it's being cheap, but the point is that I'm going to spend the money on music either way: the question is simply which is better value. As soon as Spotify can show it's better value for my usage, I'm happy to pay.

    4. Re:petty people by oldmac31310 · · Score: 1

      But beer is very expensive in Scandinavian countries! The price of beer is not a valid unit of measurement.

      --
      http://www.acetonestudio.com
    5. Re:petty people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Eeehh... They don't have any draconian limits and you CAN play as much as you want. Only free Spotify is limited.

    6. Re:petty people by Kjella · · Score: 2

      Which says more about the beer prices in Norway...

      Pardon me for saying so, but the biggest fans I've seen of the service are those who are total music fans, own plenty CDs, listens to plenty music, used to pay plenty for it. No doubt it's a great offer for everyone who listens to music all day long, it's a very vocal and happy minority. For a lot of people - like me - music isn't all that important. It's nice to have from time to time during exercise and travel and during parties, but I rarely if ever sit and simply listen to music. I didn't spend 1200 NOK/year on music before - that's 150 tracks at iTunes and you get to keep them forever so I'd actually have more like 1500-2000 by now. And I compare to the premium version because I can put those bought songs on my mobile. Particularly the 5 times/song means I can't listen to a few favorites I like, it's either buy, go premium or get out. I'll get out, thank you very much. Perhaps when you manage to look beyond your own situation you will see that Spotify for many people no longer makes sense.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    7. Re:petty people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People follow the path of least resistance. Handing out hard earned cash feels a lot different than doing "work" by listening to commercials.

      The advertising supported model offers less resistance and is why people listen to traditional radio with adverts and are happy they don't have to pay any cash (you are in fact paying by doing the work to listen to the commercials but it's so easy to do that most people don't care).

      The subscription should actually be much cheaper than it currently is. Right now a lot of these subscription services are ridiculously overpriced compared to what you pay by listening to commercials. They are in fact making a lot more money with the subscription model.

    8. Re:petty people by xtracto · · Score: 1

      I had a similar experience with Last.FM... I subscribed for some time, but after a while I realized the music collection they had was not very varied for the genres I like (speed metal, symphonic metal, heavy metal) and the "recommendations" just where not what I liked, so even though I can use the free version, the service is just not worth the money for me.

      --
      Ubuntu is an African word meaning 'I can't configure Debian'
    9. Re:petty people by xtracto · · Score: 1

      I am sorry that not all of us are paid in Norwegian Money like you... I guess we are not that lucky.

      If I payed for each of these little monthly "chip ins" required by some sites I use *sometimes* it would really eat a lot of my monthly paycheck. (Think about it... Pay for NewYork Times, pay for Allrecipes, pay for Spotify, Pay for grooveshark, pay for last.fm pay for slashdot, pay for reddit, pay for lovefilm, payfor... sheesh)

      --
      Ubuntu is an African word meaning 'I can't configure Debian'
    10. Re:petty people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is just ridicilous. In Norwegian money, one month of spotify membership costs less than a beer bought at a pub*: and the amount of music you have available is excellent. If they really want the radio model with advertisements and a fixed playlist - listen to a goddamn radio station.

      Two points.
        i. Here in the UK, radio is monotonous dirge. Loads of stations all playing the same 12 tracks over and over like the good little music industry puppets they are.
        I use(d) sites like Spotify and Last.fm to find new music that I want to buy, sometimes thru browsing recommendations, or by listening to their radio streams of similar artists etc.

      Would you go to a store that charged you an entry fee, or limited the amount of time you could shop there (remember that both last.fm and spotify get commissions from the 'purchase this track/album' option) ?
      Of course not, you'd tell them to fuck off and go find another store. And by the looks of it, plenty of people have already told Spotify that.

      ii. The range isn't all that great, lots of big name artists are missing because of various rights issues, and those that are on there seem to have additional regional restrictions (several times I've sent a recommendation to a friend, only to have them tell me they couldn't play it because they lived in a different country!)

          In this day and age it's simply moronic not to be on them, after all it's free advertising for them. If some record label doesn't want to license some music to Spotify or Last.fm then I guess I won't get to hear it. And if I don't hear it there's fuck all chance of me purchasing the CD.

      Stupid music industry keep bleating on about piracy, yet they seem insistant on doing everything within their power to drive people to it.

    11. Re:petty people by indeterminator · · Score: 1

      Still, even the most unfortunate people can afford beer. So why not a Spotify subscription?

    12. Re:petty people by O'Nazareth · · Score: 1

      Spotify has a better catalogue than my local stores and the pirate bay. I have been able to listen to albums I was never able to find before(and that I wanted to listen to). And for this reason, I really do not mind not being able to listen to the Pink Floyd.

    13. Re:petty people by marsu_k · · Score: 1

      If it ever gets near £5pm with support for mobiles I’d subscribe without thinking about it.

      Would you also like a pony with that? Seriously. 10€ per month is nothing. I spend way more on beer each month (here in .fi 10€ would be 2-4 pints, depending on the pub - although the places where that is 4 are not the ones you want to visit). I understand that some people find the omissions in the catalogue a letdown (the only hole I encounter is King Crimson - seriously Fripp, be reasonable - but I have already ripped the albums from them I want to listen), and some people simply don't listen to music that much, but to say the price is too high (including mobile access and offline) is just absurd.

    14. Re:petty people by stms · · Score: 0

      Damn beer in Norway must be expensive Spotify is about $15 a month.

    15. Re:petty people by oldmac31310 · · Score: 2

      Not available in the US!

      --
      http://www.acetonestudio.com
    16. Re:petty people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who are you to decide if 10€ a month is nothing?

      For me that is much, especially since I can't keep the music. I started to use the free service when it came because it was easy and was legal...

    17. Re:petty people by h4rm0ny · · Score: 1

      For a lot of people - like me - music isn't all that important. [...] Perhaps when you manage to look beyond your own situation you will see that Spotify for many people no longer makes sense.

      I don't think Spotify should be basing their pricing around what appeals to people who don't have much interest in music. ;)

      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
    18. Re:petty people by drb226 · · Score: 1

      Don't be silly. Of course beer is available in the US.

    19. Re:petty people by oldmac31310 · · Score: 1

      Yes, but import only!

      --
      http://www.acetonestudio.com
    20. Re:petty people by merchant_x · · Score: 1
    21. Re:petty people by DarthVain · · Score: 1

      Just how expensive are these pub bought Norwegian beers?

    22. Re:petty people by geekoid · · Score: 1

      ItT's not nothing, it twice his price point, but hey you go ahead and dictate the value people should put on stuff.

      How do you know he can even afford beer?

      I have no idea who started it, but the idea that 99 cents, 5 dollar is 'nothing' should be whipped.

      It's not nothing, its ANOTHER 99 cents, or ANOTHER 5 dollars.
      The fact that you think it's nothing either means you are rich, or you have become the bitch of marketing people.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    23. Re:petty people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not really sure what the problem is? You're comparing one service that let you buy 150 individual tracks of music "forever" - iTunes - and one service that allows you to play an "unlimited" number of tracks, as often as you like, on any device you can get the software on - Spotify.

      Why isn't this a good situation? We're not talking about The One Ring, here, there can be multiple services, one more suited for your needs, another for someone else's needs. I pay the SEK 99 / month (about USD 15 / month) for the premium Spotify service, and I use it 10-12 hours a day: On my phone while driving to work (through the car audio system) , on my PC at work, on my HTPC at home, etc.

      I think it's an amazing value for my money, and almost every day I find a new artist or a new song that I haven't heard before and really like. I *never* got that experience through iTunes. Your mileage may vary, naturally, but I think that USD 0.50 a day for unlimited access to a vast library of music is fantastic.

      I'm paying more for music these days than I used to do, and I don't buy a single CD anymore (unless it's a friend's band). Spotify has - literally - changed the way I listen to music, and it's changed in an awesome way. Also, I've completely stopped looking for "illegal" MP3s online.

    24. Re:petty people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I live in the US so don't have access to Spotify, the problem is there's a lot of people that want just 10 bucks/pounds/euros per month, they're all a good deal when you look at them your way but Spotify seems like they're actually worse than Last.fm (which sucks, btw) now and they're competing with other services for your 10 Euros.

      There's also Zune Pass here, which is 15 USD per month but gives you 10 DRM free tracks per month (so if you were going to buy an album anyway and you don't mind mp3 format that makes it around 5 USD per month).

      Btw, I know no person who goes to Norway and doesn't complain about the price of beer. Everyone tells me you go home and crack open a six pack after the first drink or two. Perhaps you want a better comparison (take out pizza maybe?) because your beer is notoriously expensive in a country known for being generally expensive.

    25. Re:petty people by marsu_k · · Score: 1

      I certainly am not rich, my income is ever-so-slightly-above-average-but-still-average - my point was that whining about the price being too high is just unreasonable. Last.fm would cost 5€ per month, and then you really can't decide what you will to listen to, wheras Spotify will let you play what you want (provided it exists wihin the collection), for the same price. For double the price, you get mobile and offline. Sure, it'd be nice that the latter option would be 5€. Or just one. Yes, a pony would be nice as well. But we live in a world where things do actually cost something.

    26. Re:petty people by marsu_k · · Score: 1

      Hint 1: Norway doesn't use € Hint 2: .fi != .no

    27. Re:petty people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's £10 per month in the UK. Huzzah for questionable exchange rates! Catalogue holes are appearing more frequently as of late though; it's pretty annoying to have songs from your playlists actually disappear.

    28. Re:petty people by slackzilly · · Score: 1

      Somewhere between 10$ and 15$ depending on the pub. I think the most common price is around 12$.

      To give you an idea of norwegian prices:
      Gas/petrol is about 2$ per liter.
      A bottle of coca cola is between 2-3$.

      --
      - "If one man can create that much hate, you can only imagine how much love we as a togetherness can create."
    29. Re:petty people by N1AK · · Score: 1

      Who's whining (beyond you whining about people sharing their opinion)? I'm fine with them offering whatever service they want, I just won't be paying £10pm for the service as it stands. And where does this stupid idea that just because you can afford something, you shouldn't care about whether it offers value for money? I can buy (as in own a physical copy of, not rent) many of the albums I like for £3-5. Given the choice of paying £120pa for Spotify or buying ~30 albums a year, I'll take buying the albums thanks.

    30. Re:petty people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      last.fm has king crimson and is free, even to mobile devices...

    31. Re:petty people by marsu_k · · Score: 1

      Not in Europe. Besides, with last.fm you can't choose which artist/album/track you want to listen to.

    32. Re:petty people by arabagast · · Score: 1

      You make a good point, personally I am a person that will listen to music 3-4 hours each day; for me a spotify premium subscription makes perfect sense. Still I can't see the real big problem of paying 100NOK a month for instant access to all (most) of the music you want. Even if you use it sporadically that is not a bad price. And it makes sense to pay more for the option to use your mobile devices. After all, spotify is a business, and they need to make their money somewhere. It is better that they actually differentiate between "pure" PC users and those who use mobile devices as well. You get what you pay for.

      In regards to norwegian beer prices; I totally agree :)

      --
      Doolittle : ...What is your one purpose in life?
      Bomb no.20 : To explode of course.
    33. Re:petty people by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      us-centric.

    34. Re:petty people by SpooForBrains · · Score: 1

      "listen to a goddamn radio station"

      I can't talk about the rest of the world, but there ARE no good radio stations in the UK.

      With the possible exception of BBC 6 Music, and BBC Radio 1 after about 7pm on very occasional weekdays, when all the idiot DJs are in bed.

      --
      "The dew has clearly fallen with a particularly sickening thud this morning"
    35. Re:petty people by CCarrot · · Score: 1

      For a lot of people - like me - music isn't all that important. [...] Perhaps when you manage to look beyond your own situation you will see that Spotify for many people no longer makes sense.

      I don't think Spotify should be basing their pricing around what appeals to people who don't have much interest in music. ;)

      True...but if they are pricing themselves out of the casual listeners ballpark, yet adding restrictions to the extent that the ad-supported service is...well...useless, then they are effectively narrowing their revenue stream to only those people who do listen to music all day every day.

      What percentage of the population is that, I wonder?

      --
      "I love animals! Some are cute, others are tasty, what's not to like?" - Betsy Schroeder, Jeopardy contestant
    36. Re:petty people by Maestro4k · · Score: 1

      That is just ridicilous. In Norwegian money, one month of spotify membership costs less than a beer bought at a pub*: and the amount of music you have available is excellent. If they really want the radio model with advertisements and a fixed playlist - listen to a goddamn radio station. Spotify is something completely different - you have full controll over what you are listening to.

      Some people aren't going to pay no matter what, so the free Spotify service was an excellent way to convert those people from file sharing (absolutely zero profit for the music industry) to some profit, even if small. It's always better to make some money than no money, which Wal-mart has proved quite well by becoming insanely massive by offering lower markup to keep prices down for consumers.

      The problem is the music industry (and many other content industries) refuse to accept that these people exist. You simply can't make those people pay, they're not willing to, they won't do it. You might get some money out of them by suing them, but the RIAA proved that's a money losing task already so it's very doubtful. But the thing is... those people just might decide to become paying customers later on if they're treated right. People's attitudes change over time, and as they get older, and have more stable income, many often decide it's better to pay and be legit than to continue to pirate. However, if you keep treating them like shit, and taking away innovative free services that will never happen. They'll continue to pirate just to spite you, or simply stop listening to any music from the big labels.

      So it is ridiculous, but not because people won't pay. It's ridiculous that the music industry would prefer to drive those people back to illegal file sharing instead of taking some profit from them. And it's absolutely ludicrous that they're willing to risk making those people life-long pirates instead of taking a smaller amount of money now in the chances of getting more from them later on.

    37. Re:petty people by Vectormatic · · Score: 1

      The subscription should actually be much cheaper than it currently is. Right now a lot of these subscription services are ridiculously overpriced compared to what you pay by listening to commercials. They are in fact making a lot more money with the subscription model.

      I personally dont think 5 bucks is that overpriced, the problem is that for my own usage i would need the premium package (i work behind a rather strict firewall), and i dont know how my mobile provider would react to me streaming music over 3G for 10 hours a day. Or how i would react to non-perfect 3G coverage interrupting my music. (160kbps means 1.2 MB per minute, 70 MB per hour, a mere 10 hours would get me near 80%-90% of my FUP, without any websurfing, while i listen around 80-120 hours of music per month)

      So for me, spending those 10 bucks per month of an actual CD or a bargain bin game give me more (and lasting) entertainment then spotify would provide.

      If in the future, i spend a lot of time in the garage (i sure hope so), i'll put up a computer to play music, and i might give spotify a try

      --
      People, what a bunch of bastards
    38. Re:petty people by h4rm0ny · · Score: 1

      True...but if they are pricing themselves out of the casual listeners ballpark, yet adding restrictions to the extent that the ad-supported service is...well...useless, then they are effectively narrowing their revenue stream to only those people who do listen to music all day every day.

      I consider the "if" in the above statement a pretty big one. I doubt at £5 a month, they're pricing themselves out of many people's ballpark. I'm an extremely casual listener. I mostly have the subscription for parties and dates. It's been really good to just have the World's music sitting there for anyone to pick from. I think £5 a month puts it well inside the casual bracket for most people.

      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
    39. Re:petty people by DarthVain · · Score: 1

      Is that like 12$ EUROS for a pint of beer?

    40. Re:petty people by slackzilly · · Score: 1

      $ is the DOLLAR sign :)

      --
      - "If one man can create that much hate, you can only imagine how much love we as a togetherness can create."
    41. Re:petty people by DarthVain · · Score: 1

      touche.

      I guess I was using it more as a "money" sign...

    42. Re:petty people by DarthVain · · Score: 1

      Still, 12$ bucks a beer. Ouch.

      I typically pay about 6-8$ a pint. I recently was at a hockey tournament in North Bay, Ontario, Canada and was pleasantly surprised to find a pint of beer for under 4$!

  10. Worth the money by ippa · · Score: 1

    A monthly $7 (translated from the swedish montly of 49 kronor, not sure what they charge in other countries) isn't that much for the kickass musicservice that is Spotify. What didn't the storage cost ppl when they had their mp3 collections? And the time spent searching and downloading?

    Spotify is fast, has a silly amount of music, has good song/playlist sharing functions and new songs start instantly. I wish they had increased the commercials instead of limiting the time for the free accounts.. but still, it doesn't cost that much compared to what you get.

    Tried some Grooveshark yesterday when I got this news.. it's not close to as polished as Spotify. Missing songs, you wait for them to start etc.

    1. Re:Worth the money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They're already playing three commercials for every song on the free service. It's pretty obvious they want to shut it down.

    2. Re:Worth the money by pr0nbot · · Score: 1

      This is not my experience at all. I get about 1 ad per album.

    3. Re:Worth the money by semi-extrinsic · · Score: 1

      The thing keeping me from upgrading my free account is that they've deleted a good portion of artists i listen to lately, like e.g. Overseer. I don't want to pay for a service where the amount of available content is decreasing!

      --
      for i in `facebook friends "=bday" 2>/dev/null | cut -d " " -f 3-`; do facebook wallpost $i "Happy birthday!"; done
    4. Re:Worth the money by tixxit · · Score: 1

      I use rdio.com (Canada & US) for $5/m. On demand music is fantastic. Seriously, its great for general listening (listen at work a lot), but it really shines when you have friends over. Just leave the laptop open and anyone can just go and play whatever song they feel like. Definitely worth it for $5/m.

  11. troll by ganjadude · · Score: 0

    yes.. its all the evol joooos /s

    --
    have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
  12. Steam shows a successful model by Dan667 · · Score: 1

    Have huge sales all the time at rock bottom prices and you will see a increase in sales even when prices return to list price. Everyone knows they can make as many copies of the mp3 files as they want for no cost so music companies are practicing bad business.

    1. Re:Steam shows a successful model by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This has essentially been 7digital's model since they launched as (if memory serves) the first DRM-free mp3 store in the UK with a catalogue from the major labels. Much of it is a little pricey and sometimes more than CD versions of the same albums, but there's a permanently cycling selection of reduced albums at £5 and £3, often including recent releases.

  13. Same thing happned to the Last fm by nicx · · Score: 1

    Up until April 12 2010 Last fm also used to provide free music radios but then they also limited number of free tracks. I hate this, when I get used to one service and then I have to discontinue using that service simply because there would be some other music service out there on the internet which is free. e.g. grooveshark

  14. Re:What A Disgusting And Vile Statement by Anrego · · Score: 4, Interesting

    As a Canadian I can understand this argument.

    I try very hard to pay for all my media.... but man is it hard. Thanks to some very broken laws and the CBC/CRTC, most content can't be offered in Canada for online download. So you find something you want... money sitting in your pocket (figuratively), theirs for the taking... but nope, they can't take it... but they can sell you something made in the 80's with a 1 star rating! Oh but please stop pirating because it's costing us revenue!

    So your choice is basically:
    - go to the store.. buy the DVD (assuming they even have it in stock and not in blueray).. go home.. rip it onto your computer (which is where you wanted it to begin with)
    - download it and be watching in ~half hour

    Relying on people to choose the morally correct option over the sane and easier one is a really bad business model!

  15. Then pay with your ballot by tepples · · Score: 1

    but thanks to the CBC/CRTC, they can't be made available here thanks to some very backwards and broken laws.

    The movie studios will be happy to take your money once you vote in a Parliament that will repeal "some very backwards and broken laws." It's like voting with your wallet, only the other way around.

    1. Re:Then pay with your ballot by HelioWalton · · Score: 2

      It's like wallet with your voting?

    2. Re:Then pay with your ballot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's like voting with your wallet, only the other way around.

      Walleting with your vote? I'm pretty sure selling votes is illegal in most countries.

    3. Re:Then pay with your ballot by crazypip666 · · Score: 1

      Maybe a free wallet when you cast your vote would improve voter turnout?

    4. Re:Then pay with your ballot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A political ad doesn't do much good if you don't mention the party!

      Either way, Stephen Harper won my vote when he shot down usage based billing! I don't like all of his policies .. but then again I like the policies of the other parties even less (especially since both parties seek to curtail spending in my chosen industry and would probably put me out of work).

      Regardless, nothing is gonna change unless _someone_ gets a majority. Most likely we'll get a slightly different minority government... with the same political antics and weekly shutdowns and nothing will really change.

    5. Re:Then pay with your ballot by tepples · · Score: 1

      A political ad doesn't do much good if you don't mention the party!

      That depends on how quickly Canadians can get Pirate candidates onto ballots.

    6. Re:Then pay with your ballot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      BECAUSE THAT WILL WORK.
      Sorry, but a few people complaining on the internets isn't going to do shit, nor are they in the real world going to do anything about it by voting someone else.

      The average person doesn't have a clue about this media vs copyright war that has been happening since before the internet even existed.
      THEIR votes are the ones that matter. They are the ones the companies have influenced and manipulated.
      We are in the ones in the minority. Our votes mean shit in the big picture. They know this and have known this for decades.
      Unless you manage to educate all the ignorant, and all the morons, NOTHING. WILL. GET. DONE.

    7. Re:Then pay with your ballot by Anne+Thwacks · · Score: 1
      Walleting with your vote? I'm pretty sure selling votes is illegal in most countries.

      Dont let that stop you.

      --
      Sent from my ASR33 using ASCII
    8. Re:Then pay with your ballot by tepples · · Score: 1

      Unless you manage to educate all the ignorant, and all the morons, NOTHING. WILL. GET. DONE.

      Then what's the best way to promote knowledge of copyright and privacy issues among the constituency?

    9. Re:Then pay with your ballot by lostmongoose · · Score: 1

      It's like voting with your wallet, only the other way around.

      Walleting with your vote? I'm pretty sure selling votes is illegal in most countries.

      We call them 'campaign donations' and that makes it legal. Didn't you know?

    10. Re:Then pay with your ballot by h4rm0ny · · Score: 1

      The average person doesn't have a clue about this media vs copyright war that has been happening since before the internet even existed.

      I don't know what this "average person" is to whom you refer, but outside of Slashdot, I think most people think the notion of copyright is reasonably fair. Inside of Slashdot, you get modded down for being anti-piracy.

      --

      Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
    11. Re:Then pay with your ballot by darthdavid · · Score: 1

      More like tellaw ruoy htiw gnitov...

    12. Re:Then pay with your ballot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are absolutely correct. Anrego's vote is stopping this from happening. Way to ruin it for the rest of us, Anrego.

    13. Re:Then pay with your ballot by cdrguru · · Score: 1

      The pro-piracy people that I have run into seem to believe the only way anything will change is to first destroy the entire revenue model of digital goods. Once people realize that it is all out there for free they will stop paying. When the older folks (that still pay) die off there will be zero revenue coming in for anything digital. Zero. Nada.

      It effectively puts everyone that it looking at revenue out of business. The "new business model" is very simple: there is no business to be had.

      This is supposed to bring in a new age of plenty with everyone contributing to the great pool of entertainment media and no greedy companies involved. Some folks will band together to make really big productions out of the goodness of their hearts and to fulfill their huge egos -- and these will be as good or better than any current movie or TV production. Just not "commercial".

      The thinking goes that after a few years of that maybe there will be some kind of "new business model" for what is left. I seriously doubt many people will be all ready to start paying again - ever - so the idea of the "new business model" sounds like an utter fantasy.

      I have my doubts about the great abundance of new high-quality productions as well. I think we are likely to see a lot of crap from people that believe they are the most talented on Earth and everyone should be eternally grateful for their contributions to the worldwide culture of Man.

  16. Spotify vs. Free by popo · · Score: 1

    In most businesses, there is a tipping point at which consumers will slow their buying habits. What recording execs consistently fail to understand is that in the music business there is a tipping point at which consumers go away forever and don't come back.

    The record labels need to remember that the option confronting users is on the one hand a model like Spotify -- and on the other hand, free (as in, I'll just bring a 2TB drive over to my friends house and get a lifetime worth of free music).

    The belief that this can, or will ever be stopped is what consistently drives them to idiotic regulations which destroy their own business.

    --
    ------ The best brain training is now totally free : )
  17. Re:What A Disgusting And Vile Statement by DanTheStone · · Score: 1

    In short, copyright infringement is illegal and wrong no matter how you try to justify it.

    You're half right, at least. I would argue that the baby-dancing-to-music videos are not wrong, despite being (arguably) copyright infringement. I would also argue that ripping my DVDs, which I've legally purchased, to my computer is not wrong. Illegal and immoral do not go hand-in-hand.

  18. Re:What A Disgusting And Vile Statement by geckipede · · Score: 1

    The morality of copyright infringement is not a simple subject. It's idiotic to just say that it's always wrong, and expect the argument to stop there.

    What if none of the money ever goes back to the original artist? What if the money never can, because the artist is long dead? What if the license for the media is held by an organisation that has no purpose other than to make money and prevent media from ever entering the public domain?

    Sure, you could just avoid all contact with whatever the media in question is, but in such a circumstance, where's the harm in piracy? Who is hurt by it?

    It's not simple. Don't pretend it is.

  19. Re:What A Disgusting And Vile Statement by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

    You can rip blueray just as well, drives are not that expensive these days.

  20. 2 observations: by mauriceh · · Score: 1

    1) The existing distribution system failed, and ceded electronic sales to 1 party: Apple.
    Once all the other minor players are killed off Apple will eat the RIAA.

    2) The paid distribution model is doomed in any case.
    Drive away enough customers and they will find other things to do, other places to get music, and, most importantly,
    they will ignore your promotions.
    Once the consumers dictate the fashion, the distributors become irrelevant.

    --
    Maurice W. Hilarius Voice: (778) 347-9907
    1. Re:2 observations: by slyrat · · Score: 1

      1) The existing distribution system failed, and ceded electronic sales to 1 party: Apple. Once all the other minor players are killed off Apple will eat the RIAA.

      You seem to forget about the other big electronic music players like Amazon, Pandora, Last.FM, etc.

  21. Not all is well for paying subsribers by Max+Romantschuk · · Score: 2

    I really love Spotify, especially the social aspects. Playlists URIs, collaborative playlists etc. are really great.

    But as a paying subscriber I really hate it everytime a song gets disabled from my playlists because of the label's greed. I've been paying more to the music industry the past year compared to the last ten years, but it's still not enough.

    --
    .: Max Romantschuk :: http://max.romantschuk.fi/
    1. Re:Not all is well for paying subsribers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here Here. I totally agree. Nothing worse that losing the songs you love. It's happend far to often for my liking... :-/

    2. Re:Not all is well for paying subsribers by Max+Romantschuk · · Score: 1

      Fortunately the song is still in the playlist (however not playable), so you don't lose the information on what song it was. But still it's far from a good situation.

      --
      .: Max Romantschuk :: http://max.romantschuk.fi/
    3. Re:Not all is well for paying subsribers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So stop paying them and pirate..

  22. Memo to the music industry: by kheldan · · Score: 3, Informative

    Give us a product we're willing to pay for, and package it in forms that we want, and we'll probably pay for it.
    Otherwise: Fuck you. You can't stop the signal, no matter how hard you try. We'll all go back to sharing mix tapes if that's what it takes, or recording off the radio. You will NEVER be able to close the analog gap. You will NEVER be able to create any form of DRM that can't be cracked in a matter of hours or days. You will NEVER be able to stop the sale of used media. You will NEVER be able to prevent people from loaning and borrowing CDs from friends. Give it up. Change, or die.

    --
    Are YOU using the TOOL, or is the TOOL using YOU? Think about it!
    1. Re:Memo to the music industry: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amen!

    2. Re:Memo to the music industry: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I realise yours might be a general point, but in relation to TFA...

      The industry supports Spotify, which offers unlimited, ad-free plays for £5GBP per month. The fuss is from the people who were using the generously free option, who baulk at having to pay for a product. Can someone please explain how it's supposed to work if there's no cost?

    3. Re:Memo to the music industry: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Trolling much?
      As stated elsewhere, if you pay what is a very low sum per month, you get to listen to all the albums licensed by spotify. What more can you ask for? Do you really expect to get everything for free, served to you in the way you of your own choosing? If so, keep dreaming

      (personally, I still buy a lot of CDs and can't be arsed to use any online service, so I'm not trying to say that spotify is the best thing ever. But pointless, off-topic ranting modded "Informative" bothers me a bit)

    4. Re:Memo to the music industry: by CAIMLAS · · Score: 1

      "Mr. Anderson. What good is music, if you can not hear?"

      I'd not put it past the music/movie industry, or the government censors they support, to try to make it a felony to "broadcast" to music you haven't paid for.

      --
      ~/ssh slashdot.org ssh: connect to host slashdot.org port 22: too many beers
    5. Re:Memo to the music industry: by UncleTogie · · Score: 1

      People always claim they'll stop pirating music when there's a cheap and convenient way of legally buying the music. So far there really haven't been such ways.

      I'm pretty sure that Radiohead put this baby to bed. Hell, even Duran Duran released their new album on iTunes in December before releasing the CD in March. The artists are more than willing to support anything that gets their music out there. Their record companies, not so much. Check the sales figures on those two examples above and tell me that people don't want to support the artists they like.

      Besides, everyone knows the bands make their money off their concert merchandise...

      In addition, guess what all my legally bought DVDs have? A warning that if I pirate, the goon squad will be sent. That's right, every single copy of my legally bought movies is lecturing me about something I'm not doing.... So f*ck 'em, I download a copy without the warning and watch THAT.

      YOU may be comfortable with people calling you a thief out of turn, but *I* resent the implication.

      --
      Don't tell me to get a life. I'm a gamer; I have LOTS of lives!
    6. Re:Memo to the music industry: by rsborg · · Score: 1

      Change, or die.

      I read the last sentence with the voice of the this old Atari skateboard game, 720 running through my head.

      --
      Make sure everyone's vote counts: Verified Voting
    7. Re:Memo to the music industry: by UncleTogie · · Score: 1

      I'd not put it past the music/movie industry, or the government censors they support, to try to make it a felony to "broadcast" to music you haven't paid for.

      Don't sell them short. They're working on it as we speak:

      http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2382048,00.asp

      --
      Don't tell me to get a life. I'm a gamer; I have LOTS of lives!
    8. Re:Memo to the music industry: by Freexe · · Score: 1

      That is exactly what spotify premium is. Cheap, easy to use, great selection and has high availability. £5 per month is the right price. I can't believe you think otherwise.

      If you want free, use bittorrent and stop pretending you would ever pay for it.

      --
      "In a time of universal deceit - telling the truth is a revolutionary act." - George Orwell
    9. Re:Memo to the music industry: by DarthVain · · Score: 1

      They have changed their business model in the last few years. Now its about political lobbying to make stronger laws making it illegal, then suing those people that break those laws for exorbitant amounts of money, trying to fear monger the rest of their consumers back in line to their old model of distribution! See!

      Not sure how that's working for them...

    10. Re:Memo to the music industry: by kheldan · · Score: 1

      At least I have the balls to say what I really mean out in public, not posting as an Anonymous Coward; because of that, nothing you say has any meaning to me.

      --
      Are YOU using the TOOL, or is the TOOL using YOU? Think about it!
    11. Re:Memo to the music industry: by kheldan · · Score: 1

      Yet another scumbag Anonymous Coward who doesn't have the guts to show his face and say what he means.
      By the way: I have a job, I have money. I buy used CD's, resorting to new only when I can't find them used because the music industry is BULLSHIT. So you can bite me.

      --
      Are YOU using the TOOL, or is the TOOL using YOU? Think about it!
    12. Re:Memo to the music industry: by kheldan · · Score: 1

      Only AC's troll, so who's trolling who here?

      I resent the music industry monetizing every single thing they can, yet still fighting against fair use. If I buy a CD, I should be able to rip it, put it on my phone, put it on a PMP, put it on my computer, make a copy to keep in the car if I have a CD player in the car, etc etc etc, but they want everyone to pay for the same music over and over and over again. I don't use and have never even used this "Spotify", and I really don't care about it, either. My whole point is that the music industry won't change it's ways, yet insists on us paying over and over again.

      --
      Are YOU using the TOOL, or is the TOOL using YOU? Think about it!
    13. Re:Memo to the music industry: by kheldan · · Score: 1

      I don't disagree with you. I'm sure if they could find some way to make broadcast radio 100% subscription only without some government agency or other stepping in and saying "Hell, no!", they'd do it, but free broadcast radio is literally as old as the hills, and I think satellite radio has proven that the average person isn't interested in paying even a paltry amount of money for it as a subscription service -- and why should they, when they can have as much music as the average radio station has in their library right there on their iPod?

      --
      Are YOU using the TOOL, or is the TOOL using YOU? Think about it!
    14. Re:Memo to the music industry: by kheldan · · Score: 1

      See, that's my point: The music industry is going to collapse under it's own deadweight. Some may say it's changing, but I say it's not changing fast enough, and while they procrastinate and keep trying to make the Old Ways work for them yet again, more and more artists are learning that they don't need the music industry, they can do it all themselves, from production all the way through distribution channels. The thing is that this may not be the most efficient way for artists to get new material to all the people who might want it. I have no problem with centralized distribution channels, but they keep trying to squeeze every single penny they can out of every little thing and it's clearly not working. There needs to be massive reform within the music industry (and the film industry; different subject); people can think what they want of my opinions on the subject, but I think everyone agrees that it needs to change in fundamental ways.

      --
      Are YOU using the TOOL, or is the TOOL using YOU? Think about it!
    15. Re:Memo to the music industry: by kheldan · · Score: 1

      It's not working. It's pissing people off, and they're either not buying anything at all (who can blame them, so much of what is being promoted right now is utter crap) or they're downloading, or they're ripping borrowed CDs.

      --
      Are YOU using the TOOL, or is the TOOL using YOU? Think about it!
    16. Re:Memo to the music industry: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is irrelevant whether they can lock everything down or not. Even if they could, there will be people making music for the love of it. Giving it away for free, selling it themselves, living off concerts, etc.

      The music industry can't stop that. So even though your post is technically most likely true, in the end it is irrelevant.

    17. Re:Memo to the music industry: by omglolbah · · Score: 1

      I pay for spotify and have been for a year and a half.

      When did I subscribe? The first time an ad ran when my visa card was within reach :p

      I am lazy. I find downloading music from torrent sites a pain in the ass as mostly I just want a few songs, not the whole album.

      Sorting is annoying... keeping track of where stuff is stored is too.

      The killer feature though is being able to set up a playlist anywhere and play that list back anywhere.
      Being able to bring my playlists with me to work is quite nice. Worth paying for.

      I subscribe to the plan with mobile features too so I can stream music directly to my phone over the wlan at work. Spiffy as hell.

      Will I go back to not paying for music? Unlikely. Unless they royally fuck up spotify. Nothing surprises me anymore though...

    18. Re:Memo to the music industry: by rastoboy29 · · Score: 1

      Actually I've been appalled recently at the success of "streaming" services like Netflix.  They are succeeding because they are very cheap and easy to use.  So they are, at least, providing some value.  But they still suck if you are in to quality at all.

      But check out Tivo sometime--they are turning into the grand central station of DRM and many people like it.

      In other words, though I'm highly sympathetic to your position--don't get cocky.  These fuckers are highly (if inappropriately and stupidly) motivated.  Think War on Drugs.  That can't work, either.

    19. Re:Memo to the music industry: by luther349 · · Score: 1

      hell yea. everytime a alt comes along they liance or sue it away couse its a bunch of old farts who think physcal media is never gonna go away. sorry it did 10 years ago dispite you flodding shelfs with it. and only monsters like apple have the money and balls to beat them back.

    20. Re:Memo to the music industry: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OK, so what if they do give up and stop producing music. What are you going to do now?

      You sound like an addict who is trying to justify the petty crimes needed to pay for your habit. "I pirate because I am addicted to music. It's not my fault".

      Just stop listening to their music. Problem solved. You save money and you'll feel considerably less angry, too, by the looks of things...

    21. Re:Memo to the music industry: by Vectormatic · · Score: 1

      after reading this post, and checking out spotify, i was this close to signing up, untill i stoped and thought about my usage. I primarily listen to music either at work, or in public transit. Work is so insanely firewalled that it would all have to be mobile-streamed over 3G. at 160kbps, it would amount to 72MB per hour, now take the aproximately 100 hours per month i listen to music, and explain to my mobile provider that 7.2 GB purely for music is fair use...

      with current technology, spotify simply can not fill my usecase in any convincing way.

      I will admit that i am not really all that used to the idea of paying for a music subscription, but if spotify would really provide me with music 24/7 for $10, i'd give it a try, too bad they cant (even if the reasons for that are beyond their control)

      --
      People, what a bunch of bastards
  23. Bad Pricing Model by Eponymous+Coward · · Score: 1

    Like Spotify, Rdio has a pricing model where they charge more if the endpoint is a phone. This makes no sense to me whatsoever and reminds me of the bad old days when cable tv companies wanted you to buy a separate subscription for each television set.

    For Rdio, I can tether my laptop to my phone and listen for $5 / month. Great! If, however, I wanted the phone to be the endpoint, they double the price. I can understand there are costs associated with producing a mobile app, but I would rather they just charge for the app rather than double the monthly fee. Bastards.

    I do subscribe to Pandora though. $36 / year is about the right price for me, plus their client is built into my television and my receiver.

    1. Re:Bad Pricing Model by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like Spotify, Rdio has a pricing model where they charge more if the endpoint is a phone. This makes no sense to me whatsoever and reminds me of the bad old days when cable tv companies wanted you to buy a separate subscription for each television set.

      ]

      Full disclosure, I'm a Rdio subscriber and am generally happy with the service. I think Rdio justifies the extra cost for the mobile option not due to you using a phone, but because of the ability (necessity really, given how awful cellular service is in the USA) to store an unlimited amount of music on the phone and play it offline as long as you authenticate to their services once per month. The $5 base plan is a streaming only model.

    2. Re:Bad Pricing Model by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bad old days where they want cable wants you to buy a subscription for every tv? What, that's their new business model.

      I had analog cable, but they're disabling analog access; they want me to rent a converter for each tv. When asked if every tv really needed a converter, they said yes. When I pointed out some of my tv support digital so were they encrypting the channels to require access or were they over simplifying, they said I need one per-tv. When pushed, they claimed directly connecting the cable to the tv was unsupported and had never been supported. Yet the analog only service I have was advertised only a couple monthes ago, originally installation was in early 2010, and it was installed by them (they wouldn't let me self-install). When I pointed out my contract gaurenteed no price increase until January 2012 and no per-tv charge ever, they claimed the charge for digital->analog converters wasn't a per-tv charge.

      They still with the same broken business model. At this point, U-VERSE or satelite would be cheaper.

    3. Re:Bad Pricing Model by Eponymous+Coward · · Score: 1

      I'd pay for a subscription today if I could stream it to my phone without needing to connect my laptop. I stream Pandora to my phone all the time and it has worked flawlessly, even when I drive around in my car.

      I actually don't want to download music to my phone. I have a Nexus S which is extremely limited in storage space. This week I uploaded my entire collection to Amazon's cloud service and to be honest, this is more useful to me than Rdio and it is much less expensive. Amazon + Pandora is working out to be a great combination for me.

    4. Re:Bad Pricing Model by MoonBuggy · · Score: 2

      Like Spotify, Rdio has a pricing model where they charge more if the endpoint is a phone. This makes no sense to me whatsoever and reminds me of the bad old days when cable tv companies wanted you to buy a separate subscription for each television set.

      I'm hugely glad to see someone else pointing this out; we know it doesn't cost them anything continuous, and we're rightly irritated when they try to keep charging us. At best, it's greedy; at worst, they're treating their customers (us) like morons who can't count.

    5. Re:Bad Pricing Model by Eponymous+Coward · · Score: 1

      It's endemic to music industry executives. When they see somebody finding new ways to use music, they think they should be paid for it.

    6. Re:Bad Pricing Model by perryizgr8 · · Score: 1

      it'd be better if you just download the hd versions of your tv shows and stream them to your tv using your xbox or something.

      --
      Wealth is the gift that keeps on giving.
  24. Re:The Jews by MightyMartian · · Score: 0

    It's a fucking faery tale for goodness sakes. Can you imagine abusing and murdering an entire group of people because of some alleged set of events in Roman Palestine?

    --
    The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
  25. It's not dead! (free have limits) by boldie · · Score: 1

    Spotify is the best service I ever used. I got it on my android phone, can sync 3000+ songs for offline use. I can use the native linux-client, I got it at work on my windows box. The only thing I miss is an ARM version for my Sheeva-plug. It can import my local music library. All this for 10€ a month. What else could I want?

    I'm looking for the same service for video but can't find it.

  26. Re:The Jews by Omestes · · Score: 4, Informative

    The Romans killed Jesus...

    Somewhat true, but it would be more accurate to say that the Roman Empire killed Jesus. (For bonus points, the government of one outpost of the Roman Empure killed Jesus)

    ...but the Jews condemned him.

    Wrong. A few Jews in small region condemned him, perhaps even limited to one very small sect of them. All Jews didn't condemn Jesus (he was Jewish, as were many of his followers, he was basically advocating Judaism 2.0 at the time, this was changed after his death to a "revolution" by catering to the Greeks), probably most Jews of the time never even heard of him, or didn't really care one bit what he was saying since he was just one "messiah" among many at the time.

    --
    A patriot must always be ready to defend his country against his government. -edward abbey
  27. Since when was it ever free? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What they are really saying is that the advertising funded model has failed, the service was NEVER free.

    How do they think commercial broadcast radio works?

  28. Re:What A Disgusting And Vile Statement by Anrego · · Score: 1

    You have no entitlement to receive a given piece of entertainment exactly how you want it when you want it.

    Agreed, which is why as said in my post.. I pay for my media (except in a select few circumstances). The people who make the media do have the right to sell it in whatever messed up way they want... and people don't have some entitlement to it. That said, considering how blatenly simple it is to pirate media... and how painful it is to actually pay for it... it boggles my mind why anyone things this is a good idea. Big media should stop whining about Canadians pirating and go after the CBC/CRTC who won't let them sell to a large audience who is willing to spend the money!

  29. This just shows... by GWRedDragon · · Score: 1

    The best way to get music is still to buy used CDs, rip them, and stick the CD in a closet. Typical used prices are ~$3 per album, which is way cheaper than buying individual songs online as long as you aren't just interested in a single one on the disc. Plus, there is no DRM so you can easily move the stuff you purchased to wherever is most convenient for you. Plus, it is higher quality than almost everything you can buy online. Plus, if you decide you don't like the album anymore you can just delete the files and resell it to get your money back.

    Yes, the CD is still king.

    1. Re:This just shows... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You might as well simply pirate the music. The artist isn't getting royalties from used CDs.

      As for "higher quality", I bought a bunch of albums online recently, and I had a choice of MP3, WMP, FLAC and even ALAC, which is what I prefer anyway. That choice and convenience made me want to buy them even more. Bandcamp.com

    2. Re:This just shows... by MrAngryForNoReason · · Score: 1

      It is pretty clear to see though that buying used cds isn't really sustainable if everyone does it. Demand would outstrip supply so prices would go up.

    3. Re:This just shows... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Simple answer would be to make more "used" CDs. Sounds like a real business model, one that is already in use in some cities.

      Unfortunately, it only works for people too unfamiliar with the Internet to download stuff for free.

  30. WiMP killed spotify by IrquiM · · Score: 1

    It's a far better service!

    --
    This is blinging
    1. Re:WiMP killed spotify by O'Nazareth · · Score: 1

      Derision spotted.

    2. Re:WiMP killed spotify by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh sarcasm, thou are my bane. Mod as troll!

      For reference WiMP is a norwegian Spotify rip-off. Yes, it does have more norwegian musicians, but honestly; who'd want to listen to that?
      Also it requires a monthly payment after the first 30 days of free usage AND it requires you to install adobe air.

      WiMP.. Meh.

      As a side note I bought Spotify premium the day it came out. After this I have not pirated a single song, and with a music library with a couple of years worth of listening, you can be sure I did and I can happily say I've stopped pirating... Music anyway.

  31. The butler... by rolyboly · · Score: 1

    did it!

  32. This doesn't kill Spotify by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Spotify hardly made any money from advertisements. If you listened to it for an hour maybe you heard three ads; most of the time it was also the same one. Sometimes they weren't even real ads but ads for Spotify Premium. Simply put it; Spotify gets most of its revenue from paying subscribers, and €9/month is almost nothing if you have a job. Besides when you are home you can share your account with other family members (just not use it at the same time).

  33. Re:What A Disgusting And Vile Statement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You have no entitlement to receive a given piece of entertainment exactly how you want it when you want it.

    Hey, the local music and film industry around here thinks they have the entitlement to demand money for ABSOLUTELY NOTHING in return.

    Levies on empty media, storage devices, computers, TVs, Internet and so on and so forth. On top of that they want me to pay out of my ass for bad services and products.

    Sorry if I have ABOSULTELY NO moral qualms whatsoever to pirate music and movies. The day I get treated fairly as a customer I will pay. However as long as I'm forced to pay at gunpoint for things I do not want or use, I take whatever I damn well please because they do the same with my money.

  34. Who killed it? by Quiet_Desperation · · Score: 1

    Uh... Kristin Shepard?

  35. Oh my more panic driven slobber.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes Slashdot article that in the face of it panics paid customer into believing an excellent paid service is no longer what it was!

    Look I pay no more than what it costs for lunch and snacks during a boring day at work. For that money I can stick in my ear phones and chose any music (within reason) to make the days better. With the free side being more restrictive, I would hope some artists return or add their music.

    Piracy? Why? If you take your music seriously either pay your money on Spotify or any other service like Itunes. People not willing to pay around £10 per month are going to pirate music anyway!

    Ridiculous article!

  36. And the RIAA wonders why... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... people pirate music. There is no other option for the most part. Why would I pay for a service that doesn't let me listen to the music I want to listen to, when I want to listen to it? The music industry is killing itself... I haven't purchased a CD or any other music in years - why? Because I'm tired of all of the nonsense that may be on the disk - had to scrubb my GF's system thanks to Sony's Root-kit. Pirated music is safer... Sad but true...

  37. Re:What A Disgusting And Vile Statement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  38. I shot the sheriff... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ... but I didn't kill no Spotify.

  39. Re:The Jews by stealth_finger · · Score: 1

    Jesus killed himself and set up the evidence against both the Jews and the Romans, to test our faith.......like dinosaurs.

    --
    Wanna buy a shirt?
    https://www.redbubble.com/people/stealthfinger/shop?asc=u
  40. Re:Memo to the music industry: They started it by b4dc0d3r · · Score: 2

    They started it in the form of radio, which was seen as essentially advertising, and then became payola (pay to play). They were paying stations to play things they wanted us to buy!

    Free music has become a lifestyle, and they started it. I'm just playing along. What's the difference between turning on the radio and hearing a song, and having it on my hard drive on-demand? Nothing I say.

  41. Re:The Jews by stealth_finger · · Score: 1

    The Romans killed Jesus...

    Somewhat true, but it would be more accurate to say that the Roman Empire killed Jesus. (For bonus points, the government of one outpost of the Roman Empure killed Jesus)

    ...but the Jews condemned him.

    Wrong. A few Jews in small region condemned him, perhaps even limited to one very small sect of them. All Jews didn't condemn Jesus (he was Jewish, as were many of his followers, he was basically advocating Judaism 2.0 at the time, this was changed after his death to a "revolution" by catering to the Greeks), probably most Jews of the time never even heard of him, or didn't really care one bit what he was saying since he was just one "messiah" among many at the time.

    Yes, but who shot first?

    --
    Wanna buy a shirt?
    https://www.redbubble.com/people/stealthfinger/shop?asc=u
  42. Re:Memo to the music industry: They started it by angloquebecer · · Score: 1

    The difference comes down to control. The labels want control of what songs are played and when. They don't have that control over the mp3's on your hardrive.

  43. I've got an idea... by calmofthestorm · · Score: 1

    ...to stop piracy, let's treat our customers who access our product legally terrible and blame the dirty pirates! Surely this will turn public opinion against them. It's the pirates' fault we can't have nice things.

    --
    93rd rule of Slashdot: No matter how obvious my sarcasm is, my comment will be taken seriously by someone.
  44. It's OK to pirate if you are Canadian by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    Since you are forced to pay a tax on blank media to support the music and movie industry, I would personally cease to buy any TV, music or movies from that point on and make full use of the license you cannot opt out of and are forced to pay. Buy a CD? That's worth 100 movie downloads, easy.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:It's OK to pirate if you are Canadian by phoenix_rizzen · · Score: 1

      It's only on blank CDs, and it only supports the music industry.

      This is why a 25-pack of blank DVDs is usually less expensive than a 10-pack of blank CDs.

      We can download all the music we want. But we're not covered for movies.

      This is why I keep a stack of empty blank CD spools at home (collected over the years) so that if anyone comes a knockin' about downloaded music, I just point to the pile and say "It's all paid for". :)

      Now, if the government actually brings in the so-called "ipod tax" on all hard-drive / flash-based devices, then I'll be downloading movies, tv shows, etc without worry. :)

  45. Re:What A Disgusting And Vile Statement by h4rm0ny · · Score: 1

    Well Spotify isn't available in Canada so I guess that this particular excuse doesn't apply for this poster.

    --

    Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
  46. That's really strange... by hnangelo · · Score: 1

    I must say I am surprised to read this. I use free spotify daily here in Sweden and I have not seen any of that except for a 20 (yes, twenty) hours limit for the OPEN version of Spotify. The version I use is the FREE one, which requires an invitation and has no such limits, at least not yet.

    1. Re:That's really strange... by shish · · Score: 1

      These changes are due to take effect from the 1st of may

      --
      I mod down anyone who says "I will be modded down for this", regardless of the rest of their comment
  47. Bzzzt!! Wrong Answer by mpapet · · Score: 1

    Yell and stomp your feet all you want, nothing will come of it.

    The point of DRM is to make it sufficiently hard to violate copyright. That's all.

    Breakable DRM is a balancing act between looking the other way while entertainment media is distributed as a kind of loss leader, and generating sufficient fear that the RIAA will litigate you for violating copyright.

    They don't need to change, they know what you like and have copyright and intellectual property law on their side. Meanwhile your right to repurpose your content has been sodomized with set top boxes. And you like it that way.

    Until you stop feeding the RIAA members your money, nothing is going to stop them.

    --
    http://www.maxineudall.com/2010/02/should-economists-be-sued-for-malpractice.html
  48. Memo to kheldan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Give us a product we're willing to pay for

    You do realize all the hubbub is about a -free- service that is slightly downsizing its service, but still keeping it -free- right?
    These aren't paying customers to begin with. Maybe some of them will now be swayed to go to the for-pay version of Spotify. The ones that say "So long, spotify - back to pirating for me!"... well, nothing really lost there - in fact, bandwidth and paying vs overall subscribers percentage -increase-.

    Spotify to the cheapskates leaving: nothing of value was lost.

    and package it in forms that we want

    what does that even mean?
    mp3 with tags and cover art?
    AAC with tags and high res cover art?
    FLAC with tags and 16-bit PNG cover art?
    but once that's there.. well gosh, that's surely not enough.. that's not the 'form that we want'. We want the original mix tracks, mix settings, at 24bit 96kHz, and the RAW photo used for the cover art.

    'cos we've already for the first two, and despite your claim...

    and we'll probably pay for it.

    "we" don't pay for it. There's a subset that do pay for these things - going through e.g. iTunes, Amazon, 7digital, etc. There's also a subset that'll never pay.. count one's losses there. But what the heck group is the one that says "we'll probably/em> pay for it". What's this probably nonsense? Either make specific what you will pay for, or just don't bother making undefined statements at all.

    Otherwise: Fuck you. You can't stop the signal,

    Oh geeze. Look, I liked Serenity, too. But try not to make people groan with pop-scifi quips.. especially not when you're about to go on such a good roll as this one:

    no matter how hard you try. We'll all go back to sharing mix tapes if that's what it takes, or recording off the radio. You will NEVER be able to close the analog gap. You will NEVER be able to create any form of DRM that can't be cracked in a matter of hours or days. You will NEVER be able to stop the sale of used media. You will NEVER be able to prevent people from loaning and borrowing CDs from friends. Give it up. Change, or die.

    Wait.. I take my earlier statement back. Are they going to die if they don't change.. or are you going back to sharing mix tapes and recording off the radio* if they don't change?
    The reason I ask is because I think the recording industry would be perfectly okay with you recording off the radio and sharing mix tapes. Somebody already paid for that radio broadcast, and if you really want to sit by your recorder hitting the record button.. or recording it on your computer and then cutting the songs down until you get a version where the DJ doesn't yap through it... hey, go for it.
    I'm pretty sure that if everybody had to go back to doing that, however, the piracy wouldn't be quite so rampant as it is now.
    And seeing as the source you're recording from is usually paid-for by advertisements as well, I'm not sure how the recording industry would 'die' if everybody started sharing mix tapes again.

    So have at it - but please stop kidding yourself. You're sounding like George Hotz before he got smacked in the face with reality.

    1. Re:Memo to kheldan by kheldan · · Score: 1

      I'm not going to repeat myself; go read some of my replies to other people's comments instead.

      --
      Are YOU using the TOOL, or is the TOOL using YOU? Think about it!
    2. Re:Memo to kheldan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I appreciate the reply. I read your replies to others' comments on your post. Note that I didn't read your reply to comments outside of this branch of the thread, so perhaps I missed something, but... the points I made in my comment, I didn't see you having addressed in your other replies.

      Now perhaps you're only referring to your attacks on Anonymous Cowards (I counted 3), and your reply is a re-iteration of those.
      So just to address one point you made on that:

      Yet another scumbag Anonymous Coward who doesn't have the guts to show his face and say what he means.

      It's not that I don't have the guts to show my face - I simply don't have an account here. I could make one, but wouldn't you then just point to my high member number and call me out as being insincere anyway?
      Even if I had an old account here - what would it actually matter? Karma, I suppose, but other than that - how would it put a face to me?
      As it is, I don't know who you are. You are almost every bit as anonymous to me as I am to you. If I googled your username and went by that, you could be Les Vermillion (stage name?) on Twitter or or Tom Anderson on MySpace.

      I understand that not every Anonymous Coward is looking for some manner of meaningful discourse and thus your reluctance - or outright refusal - to reply to them in a meaningful way.

      Nevertheless, I hope the above helps to explain that I'm not what you may perceive as a typical AC, and will just reduce my post to the single question:

      Under what terms would you pay - not possibly pay, but would pay - for music? The assumption being that you actually enjoy that music. I'm certainly not suggesting that you pay for music you dislike. From your other posts, I should really split that out, to "pay for music offered by the music industry" and "pay for music offered by the artist(s) directly", as you've made it clear you'd be more willing to buy music if it were straight from the artist (payment processors aside) rather than through a bunch of middlemen.

      Thanks :)

    3. Re:Memo to kheldan by kheldan · · Score: 1

      It takes all of a couple minutes to open an account on Slashdot, and Anonymous Cowards on Slashdot are usually trolls.
      I don't think you read this entire thread or you'd find the answer to your "question" in there. That being said you're sounding a bit like a troll to me.

      --
      Are YOU using the TOOL, or is the TOOL using YOU? Think about it!
    4. Re:Memo to kheldan by QuasiSteve · · Score: 1

      It takes all of a couple minutes to open an account on Slashdot

      Very well - done.

      That being said you're sounding a bit like a troll to me.

      I'm not sure how that changes now that there's a username and UID to go with the posts - a subject you didn't address, either as pertaining to myself or pertaining to you, despite feeling so strongly about it - but okay.

      On to the meat of the post...

      I don't think you read this entire thread or you'd find the answer to your "question" in there.

      I'm not sure why you're putting quotes there. It's a fairly straightforward question:
      Under what terms would you pay - not possibly pay, but would pay - for music?
      See previous posts for full details.

      You said you gave the answer to that question in (a) reply/replies to other comments. Slashdot's discussion system does odd things now that I have an account, so I went through your posting history instead.

      In #35832174 you point out that the current approach of trying to tighten laws by - or have laws written for - the music industry is just pissing people off.
      This has no bearing on my question.

      In #35832142 you point out that the music industry isn't changing fast enough. You also suggest that artists no longer need to go through record labels, that you have no problem with centralized distribution channels, but that you don't want what's currently happening and that is that said distribution channels are trying to squeeze every penny out of every little thing.
      This might have bearing on my question - but there's no details, so I can't be certain.

      In #35832034 you suggest that the music industry would love for radio to be moved to a subscription model and point out that this is already failing with regard to satellite radio.
      No bearing on my question. Unless part of the answer to my question is "free to receive radio". But in the same post you conclude that with the ability of people having a library of music as large as an average radio station on their iPod, they're not too inclined to be listening to radio in the first place. So I don't know about that one.

      In #35832002 you point out that you tend not to buy new CDs where a portion of the money would go to the RIAA. You tend to buy used CDs instead. However, if it can't be found used, you'll sometimes buy new. You'd also buy new if more artists would sell directly.
      This largely has bearing on my question - which I already pointed out in my previous comment. Your answer is that you'd be more inclined to buy from artists directly. But this is only part of the equation. Would you buy from those artists if they only sold their music in DRM'd WMA? I'd hazard a guess and say 'no' based on a later comment. That's why I asked you specifically under what terms you'd pay for the music. If "must be sold by artist directly" is one of those terms, that's great. I'm all for it. But is that the only term? Your original post made mention of "the formats we want", which this doesn't address at all.

      In #35831974 you do lay out some additional terms that would certainly go against the DRM idea, as noted above. That specific post seems to take me back a decade or so - I'm pretty sure every CD can now be neatly ripped to MP3 and distributed across all of those platforms without any additional cashflow to the RIAA as a result.
      But, again - "no DRM" - a term already mentioned above.

      There's two more posts where you attack ACs mostly for being AC that don't contain any additional information.

      Posts earlier than thos

  49. Grooveshark by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Grooveshark Anywhere - got today a 20$ Japan Relief subscription for 1 year, all of the money goes actually to the Japanese Red Cross.
    Using it on Android - works fine. Also the Grooveshark Desktop works fine on Ubuntu. Any music you dream of..

  50. I think not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From TFA: "The record labels, for their part, know they need to support new digital services."

    Really? Because all I've seen them do is drag their feet at EVERY opportunity and try to push through insanely high royalty schemes (internet radio royalties, anyone?) that would make new services impossible. Not really shocking when you realize this the media industry *always* tries to kill new formats - see also cassette tapes (HOME TAPING IS KILLING MUSIC), the VCR (Jack Valenti thought it was a serial killer), DAT, CD-R, digital music devices (they tried to claim ripping CDs was copyright violation), etc etc etc.

  51. Who Killed Spotify? by Phizzle · · Score: 1

    It was a suicide...

    --
    I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
  52. Re:The Jews by Fizzl · · Score: 1

    mod +5 lolocaust

  53. I have one word... by Rangido · · Score: 1

    ...and that word is Grooveshark. That is all.

  54. Re:Bzzzt!! Wrong Answer by kheldan · · Score: 1

    I don't feed the RIAA. I buy used CD's instead of new, resorting to new only when I can't find it used, and I'd buy new direct from the artists if more of them would offer their work that way. I'm sure if the RIAA had their way, they'd change the rules so that you only buy a "license" to listen to the CD, not the CD itself, and make it illegal to sell or even give the CD to someone else.

    --
    Are YOU using the TOOL, or is the TOOL using YOU? Think about it!
  55. Re:What A Disgusting And Vile Statement by frank_adrian314159 · · Score: 1

    Where's the harm in piracy? Who is hurt by it?

    Either the descendants of the creator who might collect any payments or sell the rights to a corporation, or the shareholders of a corporation who own the rights to the content. Granted, it's not easy to feel moral outrage for these kind of rightsholders, given that the actual creator of the work often does not see much, if any, remuneration after the initial creation and/or sale of the work, but if you believe in intellectual property and that it should be treated the same as any other property (a different debate in and of itself), it is taking some amount of profit from the rightsholders and, legally speaking, it is little better than theft.

    But, as you state, it's not simple. If you're looking for a rational justification in the downloading of copyrighted material, you must come at it from the viewpoint that either intellectual property or property as a whole is a specious concept, or that intellectual property cannot be stolen (and, if so, why have the notion that it's property in the first place), or that the laws surrounding copyright are so onerous that you are participating in civil disobedience to protest them. Otherwise, you're just involved in vigilantism (I am striking back for the poor downtrodden artist who the rightsholders are screwing) or theft of property.

    --
    That is all.
  56. Killed? It isnt dead by Arrawa · · Score: 1

    And I suspect they will not be for a long time. They run a good service and if they what to get rid of a couple of freeloaders, thats their prerogative. They managed to survive on small markets, so there's quite some opportunity. For me, I stopped buying cd's, I stopped searching for music for ages (the top iof the chart is easy to find, but Spotify has all the less well known albums too), so Spotify saves me a lot of money and a lot of time.

  57. That bloody fat man by PReDiToR · · Score: 1

    I wonder if radio stations have used real people to ascertain the number of listeners who reach for the channel change button (on the remote, or on the steering column, with the mouse or actually getting up and walking over to the radio to push a button) when those fucking Go Compare commercials come on?

    Focus groups and the like are one thing, but I was in a taxi the other day and as soon as that commercial came on the driver turned the radio over to another station. I remember because we had a conversation about how some adverts make you flick round the competition even though the intent of the ad is to annoy you into remembering the product.

    I'm a bit of a geek (well, duh) and I keep the TV remote in reach at all times so that I can kill the noise when the ads come on. I always mute the TV and when someone (like my Sister) says something like "simples" or "it's not a hen" I have no idea what she is talking about.

    Pariah for not being a part of the commercial culture!

    --

    Do not meddle in the affairs of geeks for they are subtle and quick to anger
  58. What's the point? by gpuk · · Score: 1

    Free spotify I can just about see the value of: you get a quick and free way to sample music you don't already own (assuming the artist is on the system). But the pro package is basically a system to rent music.... what's the point?? I mean how many worthwhile albums come out each year? Surely you're better off using the free version to check you like something and then, for the few albums you actually end up liking, go buy them off amazon. At least you then end up with an album that's yours to keep forever and do with as you please. Also, if remote streaming is really that fucking important to you, you've got their cloud player as well.

    Surely that's better than pissing your money away *renting* music... ???

  59. It was me!!! I killed Spotify! by Nyder · · Score: 1

    Yes I did. I've never been to the webpage, or subscribe to it, or used it's services. So it's apparent that my lack of interest killed it off.

    Wait, it's not dead? Another stupid article? what a shock.

    nm, carry on. Ignore the smoking gun in my hand.

    --
    Be seeing you...
  60. Re:What A Disgusting And Vile Statement by Spewns · · Score: 0

    In short, copyright infringement is illegal and wrong no matter how you try to justify it.

    The bolded is just, like, your opinion, man.

  61. Re:The Jews by couchslug · · Score: 1

    "The Jews in the RIAA are killing online music just like they killed Jesus."

    And nothing of value was lost.

    --
    "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
  62. Geez, you HAD TO ASK... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, but who shot first?

    It was obviously Chewbacca.

  63. Me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It was me. I'm sorry okay? It was an accident, I swear.

  64. you can by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the pirating music is not good .but you like it ,.
    HREF="http://www.anyincn.com/sub_of_brand.aspx?cat_id=23&bra_id=207&bra_name=POLO+Bag&cat_name=Bag">polo handbags

  65. pirate what music by luther349 · · Score: 1

    hasent even been music worth stealing in years. my ipod is laoded with apps and video and not 1 song heh. relly if anyone is pirating the garbage they make today i relly wanna knoe why heh.

  66. Re:Memo to the music industry: They started it by perryizgr8 · · Score: 1

    when mp3 players were still an expensive niche, i just listened to radio. i didn't always like what i heard but mostly the songs were good. then i got myself a 512mb sandisk player. the first songs i put into it were ripped off the few (5-6) cds i had. then i found out that i could download mp3s from the net! then we got an unlimited internet plan (it has become limited now).
    so, what i realize is that i'm unwilling to pay anything for music. if you make me listen a few ads, i'll not mind. but i will not directly pay for my music. that is the value of music for me. free music IS a lifestyle for me.

    --
    Wealth is the gift that keeps on giving.
  67. Vinyl solution by dewexdewex · · Score: 1

    Buy a musical instrument and learn how to play it.

  68. Spotify becomes history by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Free listening music can't be stopped at the internet. Spotify was a good medium for searching the net and sharing good new music with friends. 9 million free users will not turn into paying members and will search for other channels. Shame on Spotify that they didn't see this. Sorry for the irritating advertisors on Spotify (never grew to like you). Shame on the music business as well. I bought more music in the last 3 years thanks to Spotify than years and years before. I work, therefore almost never listen to radio and Spotify was the most important channel to listen to music and most important trigger to buy new music.
    Alternatives enough, although it may take some time (a month?) to profide for the same fun features like sharing, related artists and fast search for music. Bye bye spotify. This will really be the end of a great tool. Who's next? We'll see in timelines at Twitter or Facebook. I'm following alternatives

  69. Re:Memo to the music industry: They started it by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

    The difference is that when all music is available to you then you might not listen to what the record labels want you to hear. That is why they are so scared of the internet - it makes them obsolete. An indie band couldn't afford to get thousands of CDs pressed and distributed to record shops around the world, but you can throw out some MP3s in torrents or on YouTube for free. Instead of having to pay to get on the radio or send out freebie marketing material you can let the social aspects of YouTube, Facebook, Twitter etc. do it for you.

    Even recording equipment is dirt cheap now. Not quite studio spec perhaps but more than adequate for a first couple of albums. Even music videos are cheap to make now; Example (that's his stage name) made the video for "Just Me and Mandy" for just £1000.

    The days of needing a massive loan from the labels are over. Record shops are closing all over the place and new companies like Amazon and Apple control the online distribution market. The labels are fucked and they know it, so rather than try to adapt and salvage what they can they are trying to turn back time with restrictive licensing.

    --
    const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
    SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC