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
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.