I am not really sure, this is correct. For example, ebay converts much more for me than google does.
Ebay also, is better in the sense, that ebay charges only if there is a sale. Google in my experience is very expensive
Very interesting. The bid is not above 20,000 dollars as some one in one of the earlier posts predicted.
What I would be interested in knowing is that, is it really perfectly legal to re-sell DVDs, CDs and the like? I mean as far as I know there is a warning in the beginning of the DVD that explicitly states that resale for commerical purposes is not permitted?
One way to probably solve this issue is to create a movie or song file that plays on only one or two computers/devices. Any attempt to play it on another different machine should instantly result in file corruption.
Definitely in the next few years there will be effective ways to stop reselling, swapping etc and all digital art will be available on a pay per use basis.
Will be interesting to see how things pan out...
This theory seems more plausible to me than MSN buying out Google.
:)
Google is was to expensive and I agree, MSFT is good at copying
Adsense, can be a potential biggie for Google. I am sure they are thinking of some way to monetize Froogle as well.
I am not really sure, this is correct. For example, ebay converts much more for me than google does. Ebay also, is better in the sense, that ebay charges only if there is a sale. Google in my experience is very expensive
Very interesting. The bid is not above 20,000 dollars as some one in one of the earlier posts predicted. What I would be interested in knowing is that, is it really perfectly legal to re-sell DVDs, CDs and the like? I mean as far as I know there is a warning in the beginning of the DVD that explicitly states that resale for commerical purposes is not permitted? One way to probably solve this issue is to create a movie or song file that plays on only one or two computers/devices. Any attempt to play it on another different machine should instantly result in file corruption. Definitely in the next few years there will be effective ways to stop reselling, swapping etc and all digital art will be available on a pay per use basis. Will be interesting to see how things pan out...