Napster Going to Subscriptions 231
An amazing number of readers submitted links to various sources discussing that napster will now be subscription based. This follows an
agreement with BMG. As Hemos said before, conceptually this is fine, but it'll be interesting to see how its implemented, and what they charge.
Will it still be the Killer App though? (Score:2)
For me, the allure of Napster was free and anonymous access (although agreeably, anonymous is highly relative), but with them charging a subscription fee, no matter what the cost, you are going to have to relinquish personally identifiable information. You may say that this is all good and fine, because now the record companies work "together" with Napster, but I think it'll be a cold day in Hell before you see every record label willing to work with Napster.
Until that day comes, then any information you submit could just as well be subpoened by some lawsuit-happy label, whether it be one of the "Big 5" or some small indie label that you downloaded one song from.
On the flip side, I suppose it's good to see these labels realizing that they cannot stop what Napster has started.
whoa, wait a minute (Score:2)
in short, they make me pay, I share nothing
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I find this discussion really quite depressing. (Score:1)
When people expect a handout or as the old pick-pockets of old used to say a light fingered touch to be the source of compensation then eventually the theif will get what he or she deserves for the oft' picked pocket soon is empty.
Just because something can be stolen does not mean that there always be something there to steal. As a musician I am becoming less and less interested in offering myself and my work: yes my intelectual property up to the wolves.
If the theives would try to create they would have less time to steal and that would be good for all of us and maybe the value of creativity would not be dinigrated as it is now.
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New pay-Napster business model (Score:1)
BMG will begin distributing their artists' work on pay-Napster. They will collect income (sounds like monthly subscription). OK, no problems here.
Napster will still have a free service, all right. It'll have unwatermarked mp3s on it, all right. I dare you to get anything other than 15- to 30-second clips of "popular" tracks from it though. All inspired, of course, by fair use.
It'll be a shame to see Napster go.
what happens next? (Score:1)
Re:Really the answer (Score:1)
Re:Hmmm... (Score:2)
Precisely. Or if that doesn't float your boat, Mojo, Scour, or Gnutella. P2P isn't dead; one company without a business model is getting sued by an entire industry and - surprise! - they're selling out. It kind of had to happen. Now let's focus on some of these open services who have no central server operator to get sued. That will be a much more interesting legal precedent, I think. And regardless which way it goes, free music swapping for a long time to come for all the valid purposes you've mentioned.
Re:Where are the BMG songs going to be hosted? (Score:1)
> This means BMG/Napster needs to set up some big honking file servers of their own for me to use.
Get real. This is BMG we're talking about here. Odds are good they won't have anything that you're looking for in their catalog. They are one record label out of thousands - and though they might be big, they still only carry perhaps 10% of the available titles at most.
Even if you listen to purely popular music, odds are good their catalog is going to be totally insufficient.
-dentin
Two points (Score:2)
1. I wouldn't pay money for recordings of the quality that many of the things I download for free from Napster. For free, they're OK, but not for pay.
What do the independent artists do? Some of them depend on Napster to get their music to the public, and they expect it to be free. Will Napster and the music industry give them a cut?
Re:bring on Gnutella! (Score:1)
Re:Really the answer (Score:1)
yeah, and then they squatted over their user-base and expelled the ejaculate.
Re:OpenNAP (Score:2)
Re:Yes, but.. (Score:1)
Nice.
'Round Like a Record, Baby (Score:1)
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Re:My (conspiracy) Theory (Score:1)
I was not aware of this. Got any links?
Re:Bah. Napster. (Score:2)
A shared FTP would allow you and your friends in Germany to share your desired types of music much easier.
Also, I think that a group of friends sharing music on a private FTP server falls closer into the guides of 'fair use' than anything else.
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seumas.com
YES!! I can now buy music! (Score:1)
=-=-=-=-=-=-=
Bah. Napster. (Score:2)
It's rare that one finds an item on Napster that they couldn't find from a friend they already have. Napster just made it easier for people who don't have friends or connections to still get lots of free music.
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seumas.com
BMG (Score:5)
Does this mean that if I don't send back my reply card each month, my computer will automatically download songs I don't like?
Re:I find this discussion really quite depressing. (Score:1)
Re:Limited selection (Score:2)
Added convenience (Score:1)
try the edonkey (Score:1)
Next Hall of Fame member? (Score:1)
http://www.fuckedcompany.com
Re:Remember - We still have a lawsuit (Score:2)
In either case, the RIAA has to risk a favorable or limited decision over no decision whatsoever.
Funny... (Score:1)
Does anyone honestly think that Napster will retain even 10% of their current user base if they force them to subscribe? Subscription = tracking = loss of privacy to most folks (not that Napster was all that private in the first place, but now it is glaringly apparent to novices).
I'll see everyone on Gnutella...
Re:artists? (Score:3)
The important thing is the *record company* gets paid. They're the ones who own the material.
After all, the artists are just the paid employees of the record companies. They've already been paid.
Think I'm kidding? Look up the infamous IRS "twenty questions" and apply them to conditions that musicians work under.
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Hmm... information doesn't (Score:2)
Re:Still free (Score:1)
Might be a good idea. (Score:1)
This could also help out the indie artists, now they might be able to make some money and move out of their parent's basements. (Tounge-in-cheek, for those with out a sense of humor)
~LE
Re:Neat (Score:1)
Hmm.. (Score:1)
Some questions (Score:2)
1) How will the subscription fee be distributed? Will it be like the audio-cassette levy, which is split up between the major recording companies? If a user downloads a track from Matador or Alternative Tentacles, will the money go to the artist/label who released it, or to BMG?
2) What about non-copyrighted content? Will BMG be able to levy a tax on bands putting their demos up and trainspotters sharing their collections of train whistles?
3) Will the unencrypted MP3 format be used, or replaced with a streaming mechanism (as in Universal's subscription trial) or a user-keyed format (such as Liquid Audio, which can be encoded with the subscriber's credit card number)? The majors seem to be mortally averse to unencrypted audio formats.
What about the concert tapers' recordings? (Score:1)
What about incomplete files? (Score:1)
Would turing Napster into a pay-service change this aspect of Napster? Also, what about the quality of the MP3s themselves? I prefer encoding at 192kbps or variable 192-320kbps... but the average person thinks that 128kbps is just fine. I'm not willing to pay for any sort of service that doesn't provide me with the quality I want in my audio, and I don't think that turning Napster into a pay service will accomplish this.
-agent oranje
Re:They said that... (Score:1)
A step in the right direction, but that's all. (Score:1)
Napster's going out of business (Score:1)
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Aw Dammit (Score:2)
oh well (Score:2)
Yes, but.. (Score:3)
So, what that would mean is, you pay napster your paltry sum ($5 a month?), and get all the same choices you have now, maybe half as many, PLUS a whole collection of REAAAALLY high quality songs from BMG's collection (one of the largest on the planet).
This is *EXACTLY* what needs to happen.
Now, we will get to prove once and for all if it was the price, or the convenience that everyone loved.
I bet 50% loved the convenience and are willing to pay for it, and the other 50% "Just wants information to be free".
:)
We shall see!
Hello, OpenNap. (Score:3)
- A.P.
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* CmdrTaco is an idiot.
Napster Coup! Read between the lines . . . (Score:2)
One of the key issues -- strike that -- the key legal issue in the Napster case is whether the Napster technology has a "capacity for a substantial non-infringing use." No actual substantial noninfringing use is necessary for Napster to prevail -- just a capacity for the same. That standard is the one stated by the Supreme Court in Sony -- the one, overarching precedent in Napster.
A key point made in the briefs again and again is that there not only exists such a capacity, but substantial non-infringing uses are increasing in frequency in various ways: particularly the use of peer-to-peer sharing as a means to distribute files for which distribution has been consented. RIAA argues, pathetically, that such consent will never happen.
Bwaahaha! Gotcha!
By dealing with Napster to set up a consented, subscription-based sharing service, Bertelsman concedes the point -- there exists a capacity for a substantial non-infringing use, and hence can be no contributory infringement.
Re:Really the answer (Score:3)
Collecting a monthly fee from users hardly counts as actually being able to quantify how many people downloaded a Britney Spears track versus how many people downloaded a Linda Perry track. You wanna guess how much of this "membership" will make it to ANY artist? I'd be SHOCKED if the amount was more than five percent. Consider the observation Courtney Love made awhile back when she talked about how the labels want to pay artists the "club spin rate" for mp3 downloads? For those not in the business, that's a politely way of saying, "shit". And, again, we're talking about that five percent being "shared" amoung the artists whose lives were signed away to the big evil majors participating. And for an artist who gets some "share" of this five percent, let's then take out about eighty percent off the top for lawyer/management/reco-scum costs.
Uh-huh. Artists will get paid under this system. Right. Yeah. Whatever.
Napster totally bent over and took it up the ass here.
Re:Clarification (Score:2)
I wouldn't put that on the entire music industry. This is just one company, BMG, that sees a way to rake in some money. It will probably hurt the RIAA in the long run but my guess is that BMG doesn't care too much about that, they just want to make some money and the rest of the industry can be damned.
Comment removed (Score:5)
Re:Clarification (Score:2)
Re:Fanning... (Score:2)
Re:I'll support this IF... (Score:2)
Just bitching... (Score:2)
Why $5/month? In the last 4 years I bought 10 CDs ~ $150. I'd have to pay $60/year or total of $240 for the same amount of time. I realize that I'm hardly and average CD buyer, but still...
This pricing scheme makes sense for "power users". How about an alternative pay-per-download plan?
Re:Neat (Score:2)
That in addition to any new services BMG might want to provide. New B-tracks, special discounts, that sort of thing.
Advertisments? (Score:2)
Deal with the devil (Score:4)
Of course, this study conflicts with others that show how Napster promotes record sales. Why?
[warning: I feel a rant coming on!]
Hmm... maybe it's because CDNow's service is terrible! My first online shopping experience was with CDNow, and it took then 22 days to ship the 2 CDs I ordered. Twenty-two bloody days! On the 14th day, I used their website to cancel the order, and was sent an email on the 15th day that said it was impossible to cancel the order - it was already in process. But it still took them a week to ship it! I received it on the 24th day.
Now compare this to Amazon. Yeah, I know: "Amazon's one-click patent sux." But they shipped my single-CD order the next day. Unfortunately, UPS misplaced it. I sent an email requesting that Amazon call UPS and initiate a trace on the shipment. Instead Amazon shipped me another item, priority overnight! That's service! (On top of that, I eventually wound up with two of the items, at the cost of only one. Don't worry - Amazon is making up the trivial loss with my good word of mouth advertising.)
So the point is - maybe it takes an average of 90 days for internet users - who frequently happen to be Napster users - to recognize that they should avoid CDNow. (It took me only 30 days.)
This is the type of company that has Bertelsmann as a parent. Be afraid... very afraid.
This screws the fans and artists even worse. (Score:2)
What makes you so sure that this money goes to the artists any more than buying CD's do? And now, BMG is going to profit off of artists that it has nothing to do with. So in effect, BMG is out there making money from other major record labels, as well as independent artists. I see how BMG is winning from this, but not artists or fans. It just makes the middle man more powerful, and hopefully Lars and Dr. Dre will fight this even more than they were fighting against their fans before. Whatever happens, this is not a good thing that napster and bmg are teaming up. It screws over the fans and artists worse than before.
Re:Hello, OpenNap. (Score:3)
The good part being, here, that the music industry probably can't go after a mercurial system like this -- you can't clean up mercury with a flyswatter, as they've discovered here and there in the past (decss, et al).
Re:Clarification (Score:2)
Bertelsmann AG, specifically, not the industry as a whole. Napster has a long way to go, yet.
One thing they music industry could seriously benefit on, here, is the ability to meter the access of music. Follow trends, etc.
I, for one, have been bummed a number of times that a favorite album got damaged and, guess what? It's no longer available, go to ebay or something. I hope they get it all worked out, its really the best to have a fair compromise which benefits the producers (who did put up some development money), the artists and the fans.
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Re:Really the answer (Score:3)
Re:Napster Coup! Read between the lines . . . (Score:2)
Um, No. This straw man has nothing to do with the case.
Napster stated, truthfully and undeniably, that they cannot infer from the "title" of a work whether the work does or does not contain copyrighted subject matter that is being transferred without consent or subject to a fair use exception. Napster further stated, truthfully and undeniably, that the transfers of content are accomplished peer-to-peer, without capacity for review or intervention by Napster.
Nothing described thus far in this thread contradicts those propositions or gives rise to any questions of credibility. There is no cause of action in the complaint for negligence, and accordingly, there is no legal basis for which anyone should be "nailed for massive amounts" thereof.
Re:Clarification (Score:2)
The author, Damien Cave, doesn't identify his sources, other than some quotes from Napster CEO Barry. But he describes the deal as a) a loan from Bertelsmann to Napster, b) rights for Bertelsmann to buy part of Napster, c) a promise to drop the lawsuit once a membership service is online, and d) the availablilty of the Bertelsmann catalog for the membership service.
Cave also describes how the existing free service will remain.
Yeah, this is great, but... (Score:2)
Sellouts (Score:2)
Let's see if Shawn's soul gets into that big open-source community in the sky *now*.
I for one am going to switch immediately to OpenNap and Scour. Not that I have a problem with paying $5 a month for music, but it's the principle of the thing.
Re:I find this discussion really quite depressing. (Score:2)
Start your own web site and 'open source' your music. Provide radio quality mp3's of your work, all of it, not just select items.
SELL the CD version from your site for $10. At today's prices for having a pro house cut your CD's and deliver them to you in jewel cases with full color art your gross profit for that is $9 if you only order 100 at a time. More than that if you go for bigger batches. You sell 1000 this way and you'll put more money your own pocket than if you sold 100,000 through the traditional channels.
Live shows. Noone can steal those. If you have a good live show, at a price people will pay, you make a living. *GIVE AWAY* cd's of your radio quality mp3's at your shows. SELL the full CD for the $10.
This is just an extention of the Grateful Dead model into the digital age. The boys never made as much money as KISS, but they never went hungry either and could gig their asses off.
Doesn't matter. (Score:2)
So what if they have a subscription service, even if they keep around their free service. When is the last time you used a server actually run by napster anyway? Frankly, I find the selection on non-napster owned servers to be better anway, and they are often just less clogged up.
So how do you do this, you ask? Just head right over to a server list (such as napigator's) [napigator.com], find yourself an opennap server, load it up in gnapster [gotlinux.org] and go on with your bad self. No fuss, no muss, no bother.
So somebody tell me again why napster's decision to have a subscription service matter? Do you really need to pay money per month to be able to download the newest Back Street Boy's single?
Re:Where's the value? (Score:2)
Obviously, the people who MAKE the music are the ones who start the process to bring it to you. Along with the team that wrote the song, the producer, etc. They're a huge part of the equation, and they're the ones I was referring to.
I don't give a flying fuck about the record labels.
-- Give him Head? Be a Beacon?
Re:OpenNAP (Score:2)
you must have missed math class that day?
OpenNap (Score:3)
Re:Bah. Napster. (Score:2)
Unless you don't have a lot of friends that trade mp3s, or aren't fans of the same bands/artists that you are.
The only reason I finally fired up Gnapster was because it occurred to me that I could find a couple of oddball songs by one of my favorite bands, Moxy Fruvous [fruvous.com] -- specifically a song they did on their demo tape which used the words to Dr. Suess' "Green Eggs and Ham". Apparently the good doctor (or his estate) pointed out that he discourages use of his works in certain venues, so they haven't distributed any more copies of their demo tape (though they will perform it live on occasion).
But all it took was for one person to rip it to MP3 and voila! It lives forever.
And in the process, I found out that they have not one, but two new albums, because the songs were available on Napster! I've tracked down one of them and am looking for the other one (I guess I'd have to say that yes, Napster does not discourage me from buying CDs) if only so I can re-rip them at better quality (or even ogg [vorbis.com]-ify them...)
Jay (=
Re:Fanning... (Score:2)
I'm in if.... (Score:5)
A couple of caveats before I sign up...
It must be HIGH quality. The best MP3 is barely good enough. I've got a high speed connection, so I wouldn't mind pulling down a couple hundred meg per CD.
No watermarking. That will kill the sound quality and it disturbs music intentionally recorded in surround (messes up the pro-logic steering). Plus I don't like being tracked.
It has to be a portable format with no restrictions. MP3 is fine (except for the sound quality issue) because I can convert to
I want privacy options. What I download and the type of music I listen to is between me and the company I download from. I don't want to be a part of their marketing statistics, either as an individual or as part of a demographic.
I want cover art and inserts. Downloadable is fine, but make it high quality.
Finally, I'd like to know how my monthly fee gets distributed to artists.
-S
Re:I'll support this IF... (Score:2)
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OpenNAP (Score:2)
It's simple. Napster sold out and I'm moving to OpenNAP [sourceforge.net] servers.
And if they ban OpenNAP there's always FreeNET. The greedy capitalist record bastards can't stop us! We are the future!
My (conspiracy) Theory (Score:5)
Napster & BMG will develop a fee-based service for high quality MP3s. BMG will mandate a subscription fee that is unreasonable in the minds of most people. Very few people (if any) will join pay-Napster. With so few people paying for it, Napster won't be able to pay their bills or the loan back. Eventually Napster (the company) will go bankrupt and BMG will declare (enthusiastically) that the only reason Napster existed was for "pirates" to get free music. Selling music over the internet just doesn't work. BMG will claim that they tried to work along with Napster, but the business model was flawed from the beginning.
That's my prediction. Maybe I'm just too cynical.
my prediction (Score:2)
Once the novelty of Napster wears off, and since they are paying to use the service, users will demand high-quality MP3s from trusted sources, instead of slow downloads from some guy who didn't even get all of the song ripped. So naturally the music publisher will supply them. And people will mostly download from the music publisher. Napster will turn from a peer-to-peer network into a client-server network, similar to what eMusic has done with flat-rate unlimited MP3 downloads, except with a proprietary browser (the Napster client). Big publishers will get a piece of the fees and lots of exposure, but indie artists looking for exposure will be shut out of both exposure and fees.
So is this good or bad? I personally like the idea of a centralized place to get MP3s, with guaranteed quality. I don't want to download them from my neighbor if I can't tell ahead of time what the quality is.
But I also don't like the idea that an indie publisher or individual will have to pay to put their songs on Napster, their fans will pay to download them, and BMG gets money both ways.
I'll support this IF... (Score:3)
Here's what EXACTLY needs to happen for me to support this:
1) Access can't be to JUST BMG's "active catalogue". The whole reason I (and many many others) use Napster is for those hard-to-find songs, the ones that have been out of print.. the ones I can't get anywhere else except through Napster.
2) They MUST allow for some sort of short term "try-out period" for songs... That would give you more incentive to check out new things (risk free). I mean, how often does it happen that you download a song only to find out that it's not what you thought it was? (I know, I know, you should check DURING the download...) If the "rights management" system gave me an hour or so to decide whether to "keep" the song, it would deal pretty well with that issues, I think.
Those are just my 2 cents worth...
Re:Yes, but.. (Score:2)
A 256kbps mp3 recorded from a master, in a clean-room implementation would probably sound pretty damn good to the naked ear.
I really find it unlikely that people will 'demand' more.
As to the secure format.. the second they leave the
From players, to file swapping, there are a million reasons why NOT to use anything but.
Neat (Score:5)
opennap (Score:2)
Re:Really the answer (Score:2)
This may solve the Napster issue. But it sure doesn't solve the P2P issue at all.
Where's the value? (Score:2)
I tend to think that deals like this that require a paying subscriber base will be more of a threat to Napster's survival than the lawsuits...
Clarification (Score:5)
They may do both in parallel, shutting down the free service only if they are legally required to. Or, they may just cripple the free service in some way... In any case, people are just going to jump ship to Scour, MX, Gnutella...
This is actually a stupid move on the part of the music industry, since, without a legal precedent, they'll have to jump through all the hoops again to bring down those other services. If they'd just stuck with their guns and brought down Napster, they'd have much more clout to threaten those other services.
Re:Where's the value? (Score:3)
Um, how about legitimacy?
This new service might not become the be-all end-all of pay-for-music online service, but it will open the door to better ways of doing it.
The people that use Napster for legitimate reasons (all 10 of them), will NOT mind a $5 subscription charge to get the music they like *LEGALLY*. You don't want to pay $15 for a CD? Fine. Pay your subscription, and download your music from BMG/Napster's extensive collection. You get your music through legal distribution channels, you're getting it in mp3, AND YOU'RE SUPPORTING THE PEOPLE RESPONSIBLE FOR BRINGING YOU YOUR FAVORITE MUSIC.
Or, you could be one of the billions of thieves out there that steals music through "illicit channels", and was responsible for mp3's bad reputation to begin with.
I'm not a current Napster user, nor have I ever touched it. However, if this subscription service works well, I'll gladly participate.
Almost all of the excuse-robots on Napster are justifying their theft by claiming that "CDs are too expensive!" Well folks, this is a solution to that problem. If you still need to complain, and $5 is too much for you to spend...stick with your FM radio.
-- Give him Head? Be a Beacon?
Remember - We still have a lawsuit (Score:4)
Think about that.
If the court finds in favor of Napster, this opens up a lot of potental to 'free' IP that has otherwise been sat on. Copying CDs to MP3 and posting on the net? Legal. Copying DVDs to VCD format, and posting freely on the net? Legal. Copying ebook text and posting to the net? Legal. (Of course, assuming you didn't hack any copyright controls).
Think about that from RIAA, MPAA, e-book publishers pov for a moment.
This is a very scary and eye-opening case. I can see two things happening. Either the remaining RIAA groups feel they have a win that they will stick it out and make sure to get a ruling, or they will drop the case and join BMG in the service. In the former case, if they get the win, it would be unlikely that Napster would win in the SC, and RIAA would be able to relax. However, if they lose, and on any appeals, the entire structure for how RIAA, MPAA, and those others make money is gone. And given their actions, they are aging, and may not be able to survive such a blow. [*] In the latter case, with the threat of such a decision gone for the moment until they figure out how to sue Gnutella, that situation of IP opening up will not come to pass and they can rest easier. If I were RIAA, I know which way I would go. In addition, current law offices that specialize in copyright and music industries indicate that Napster's defense is very strong, including the fact that non-commercial sharing is specifically referred to and protected in the DMCA.
[*] Mind you, the decision could specific relate only to musical works. Movies and such may not be covered, but even with a little break like music, the other art forms are only another lawsuit away.
I'm excited about a member-based Napster, I'd gladly pay a small fee to get high quality recordings. But there is something to be said about opening up the IP that is controlled by a few, and I would be willing to have that over the member-based Napster.
Re:It's my.mp3.com (Score:2)
Not bloody Likely
Will Metallica still sue? (Score:2)
If not, then artists are still not getting compensated for their work that appears on Napster. It would be interesting to see if some of the bands find this agreement insufficient and still sue Napster.
Re:I'll support this IF... (Score:2)
That's why they are charging a monthly fee instead of a 'by-download' fee. That way, you can try out all of the music you like...risk free.
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The End of an Era (Score:2)
If Napster is no longer available for free (actually no acticles state their free service is ending), then you can forget about having a program you can use to find any song, anytime.
The beauty of napster is the sheer number of songs available. If there is a membership thing implemented, then a lot less people are going to be connected, sharing their files. The huge selections of songs is going to melt to a tiny fraction of what it once was.
This is truly the end of something great.
what about Ogg Vorbis? (Score:2)
Won't be the same Napster we know and love (Score:2)
Napster's main strength is its huge user and file base. Even if you're willing to pay $4.95 a month, I'd guess 90% of Napster users aren't. This means that finding anything obscure or non-mainstream will be a LOT harder, since 90% of the file sharers have left(and hopefully migrated to Gnutella!)
Without the huge user base and diversity of files they provide, searching for anything other than a radio-played single will be futile. This of course favors the major record companies and media conglomerates, which I doubt BMG would mind one bit... The question is how long before they institute a per-song charge? They already have some sort of automated credit card billing system to collect your $4.95 each month.
A more important question is, will anyone care, or will we all have left BMG/Napster in the dust and be sharing the love through gnutella, MX, opennap, or whatever?
Memo (Score:2)
To: Director of IT operations.
For various reasons that have come to my attention, I believe we may need to add more USENET servers. Based on our market share and other data, I believe we can anticipate a dramatic increase in USENET traffic, especially in the binary groups. Some of the other managers and I had a meeting this afternoon and discussed the possibility of blocking the binary groups, but decided that in order to provide our customers the level of service to which they are accustomed, that should not be done. So, add some more USENET servers. If you have any questions, you know where to reach me.
Re:Hello, OpenNap. (Score:3)
I think OpenNap WILL become more popular, but I think you will see ALOT of people willing to pay, so the artists do get some money.
Most people *I* know arent really out to rape the artists, and get a free lunch, they just LOVE being able to download THAT mp3 they are looking for in 3 seconds flat.
BUT, i also can see alot of people "getting their money worth" by getting a HUGE harddrive, and SUCKING down PILES of mp3's for a month or two, and then leaving the service, only to return every 6 months or so.
We shall see..
BMG will take spamming to a new level (Score:2)
(Those CD clubs are nasty I was a member of Columbia House for about a year, six or seven years ago. I cancelled. To this day, I still get snail-mail and even phone calls every few months. Talk about thick-headed. Just imagine if they had my e-mail address... *shudder*)
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All generalizations are false.
It's my.mp3.com (Score:3)
So yet again we're being told that the only way we're allowed to have MP3s is if we personally encode them on our computers. I thought we were all supposed to be moving to a new computer model where the desktop computer and the Internet are inseparable and complement one another. Evidentally not.
They said that... (Score:2)
Too early to react (Score:2)
But until they reveal more about their business model, it's too late to cry foul, bemoan corporate sellouts, cheer victory, or predict demise. I mean, come on... everyone knew Fanning was going to parley Napster's huge user base into something profitable sooner or later...
We don't even know how the big record houses are reacting to this... it's just too early!
Napster not going to be subscription based! (Score:2)
The only paragraph mentioning subscriptions it this:
Bertelsmann's forward-thinking approach will enable the new Napster membership-based file sharing service to become an important community for artists, record companies and consumers. BMG, as a leader in the online space, supports an array of secure, digital distribution alternatives that respects copyrights, including file sharing, downloads and subscription services.
which talks about BMG having expertise in subscription based services, and does not link this fact to Napster.
To be fair, the press release doesn't say Napster won't ever be subscription based, but it doesn't say it will either.
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Re: (Score:2)
How is this going to work? (Score:2)
This still doesn't help find out which mp3's are legal and which ones arent, or where to get high quality ones from?
The only way I can see this working that doesn't suck is if we get a new user "BMG" which sits on every napster server with a huge connection and acts as an official server for the high quality BMG legal mp3's.
Of course they'd rather make money while letting us do all the work and incur all the costs.
Wow, Capitalism sucks.
Where are the BMG songs going to be hosted? (Score:3)
I would hope that if I am paying a fee for this new service, then I will be guaranteed to find a high quality recording of the songs I am looking for. This means BMG/Napster needs to set up some big honking file servers of their own for me to use.
If, however, BMG is just going to dump the catalog on Napster and let the peer-to-peer network take care of hosting it, where is the value? Can I charge BMG for hosting their songs? If others are paying Napter/BMG to download a song, and that download actually uses my resources, how am I compensated?
I'm wating for a lot more detail on this before passing judgement.
Re:Remember - We still have a lawsuit (Score:3)
Seth
Lots of press (Score:2)
It's hard to say why the internet press is jumping all over this one: is it to appeal to their target audiences which include mp3 snarfers or is it just a big human-interest story, in the way Time and Newsweek and all the dead-tree rags have covered it. But at least Napster's demonstrated one thing: even people who aren't willing to pay for their music can still provide the eyeballs for banner revenue models. And ultimately, that's the only way any of these consortia will be economically viable.