BitTorrent Bundle Puts a Music Store Inside Torrents
An anonymous reader writes "BitTorrent has come up with a new way to sell music. It's called BitTorrent Bundle, and it puts the music store alongside the torrent. At last, someone has come up with a way to turn all us entitled, lawless downloaders into paying customers. BitTorrent thinks of BitTorrent Bundle as a sort of 21st century band flyer. Post a torrent with a handful of live tracks from your latest tour, Bundle it with a store that lets your groupies buy the full album."
Put simply, the idea is that bands publish a basic torrent with a few songs as a teaser. When users download that .torrent file from BitTorrent.com, they're shown a page asking for something — money, an email address, or social media interaction — in exchange for the rest of the album (or other bonus content). If they comply, they get a different .torrent file. It's not intended as a guard against piracy, but as a way to link up content creators with the torrenters who are actually willing to pay.
At least somebody is thinking creatively about the music situation, instead of just whining and wishing for the "old days" to come back.
Of course, those wedded to the erstwhile status quo (major labels) will crap themselves. Or try to sabotage and/or badmouth the idea.
Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities. - Voltaire
I've spent 50 bucks during the last week over "promo-torrents." I haven;t spent so much money on music since the Napster free-for-all.
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"First things first -- but not necessarily in that order"
-- The Doctor, "Doctor
Underestimating people by thinking that they won't download the next link down, which is the completely free pirated album.
Underestimating the RIAA's greed that they would actually agree to this.
Underestimating the artists themselves as most don't have more than 2-3 good songs an album anyways.
It does make a bit of sense though as I can grab a recorder and get the hit songs off the radio I guess (quality debate out of scope), but so far the best model I've seen for selling music based off of samples is playing the first 20-30 seconds of the song and then asking if the user wants to buy it.
Still at least, they're trying, I'll give them that.
They look for the bootlegged torrent.
Pirate away, then
Happened on the Humble Music Bundle: a few songs of Stereo Alchemy were ofered as bonus content, along with a .txt wich contained the band's webpage.
Result: my first legal album bought for the last 10 years
I would probably use it and pay them.
If bands used it and their management company got 99% of the profit and gave them the other 1%, then screw it, I'll continue torrenting (or actually, just continue downloading legitimately free music and/or giving money to indie musicians that are set up to actually receive money from me in a more legitimate setup. Often not 100%, if they're going through bandcamp or equivalent, but still, 80-90% of it.)
Apparently some MBA finally figured out that "peer-to-peer downloading for free" means (FREE) "peer-to-peer marketing".
The product (bits that encode music) is not scarce. Consumer attention is very scarce.
An ever increasing amount of content competes for a precious foothold in a consumer's attention span.
Trying to prosecute "illegal downloaders" is being penny wise and pound foolish.
Trading a non-scarce resource for a scarce one is always a win.
"And they never went further, no, they never went back Then came the churches then came the schools Then came the lawyers then came the rules Then came the trains and the trucks with their loads " has been this way since 1995 or so.... news at eleven...
Religous speak to God. Insane are spoken to by God. When all shut up, one can finally hear Shostakovich in peace
...for people who want bigger botnets. If this got popular is would heaven for those trying to infect users with malware, adware, etc.
It's still not as good as simply having a website with a downloadable mp3 file or two, plus a "buy the album" button (1990s tech). But I guess I can't fault the BitTorrent company for wanting to build on bittorrent instead of HTTP, and maybe it causes the hosting server to be slightly cheaper. (No, wait, music files are so tiny compared to what people do on the 'Net these days, that I really doubt it makes a difference in cost, either.) But at least bittorrent is "hip." This is a cutting-edge 2003 business model. Next up: band pages which serve NZBs pointing to to the msgids of their posted MP3s. ;-) Is Twitter still 140 characters, or can you tweet a 4 MB file yet? ;-)
As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
The only correct way to correctly make a bittorent store is to make it the entire album, and then just ask for money.
This torrent will be beside full packages, why would you download the gimped one? And if I wanted to pay for the music I would pay at a store so I could direct download instead of having to deal with all the extra torrent stuff.
Troll is not a replacement for I disagree.
If I *really* like what I torrent, I wait until it's available commercially
Let me know when Song of the South, Secret of the Incas, Pinocchio and the Emperor of the Night, or Spartakus and the Sun Beneath the Sea is available commercially on DVD or BD.
"Follow us on facebook for the rest of the album"
Which would require one to use Facebook in the first place. Doesn't a Facebook account require verifying a unique phone number nowadays?
I think we all know the only place the RIAA is relevant is in the retirement accounts of the congressmen they've bought.
That and people who listen to music on the commute but don't have the recurring expense of an unlimited data plan. They're stuck on FM, and FM stations have long-term relationships with Warner Music, Universal Music, and Sony Music.
And with this, you've missed one of the most important points of Peer to Peer file sharing. It's the ultimate a-la-carte menu
Since when? I thought BitTorrent was optimized for downloading an entire album as opposed to individual tracks from that album. Among pirate networks, Napster, Gnutella, KaZaA, WinMX, and to a lesser extent eDonkey were better for singles.
Ideally, we need a standard for placing advertisements inside the music files themselves, basically a codec that controls the album artwork display. Bands could overlay the album artwork with links to their website, to make donations, tour information, etc. All controlled by whoever uploaded the mp3, which the band can always do first.
The Christian religion has been and still is the principal enemy of moral progress in the world. -- Bertrand Russell