

Songfile (lyrics.ch) Trails Off 220
dave256 writes: "I was recently wandering about looking for some lyrics and CD track listings, and going to my good old standby, lyrics.ch (and summarily suffering through the redirection to songfile), I noticed a notice:'On September 30, 2001, the International Lyrics Server website will be closed and all lyrics will be removed from the Songfile web site.
Thank you for your support, and we appreciate your past patronage.
Please direct any questions or inquiries regarding this change to lyrics@harryfox.com.' Who was this masked harryfox.com? Boy was I (not) surprised. I for one will miss the old beast."
The lyrics.ch site has survived some tough times before, so perhaps this isn't really its end.
Guess who owns the domain lyrics.ch? (Score:2, Redundant)
domain. They didn't take ownership of it recently because
whois says that the record was last updated on 5/23/01. Maybe
this is nothing new for everyone else, but I didn't realise
it until now.
Open Source Lyrics.. (Score:1)
Re:Open Source Lyrics.. (Score:1)
The day the music died indeed (Score:2, Insightful)
By making the art harder to obtain keeps the audience from enjoying the art. It doesn't make sense. It's too ironic. It's not like the artist is going to be making much money selling song books and lyric books.
I know of one artist group that publishes their lyrics via the web, www.beastieboys.com. Let us support and rejoice in the Beastie Boys.
funk
Re:The day the music died indeed (Score:2)
woof.
Wasn't "Learn to Fly" on that list of banned songs from some lame Net-radio group? Great tune, amusing video.
Re:The day the music died indeed (Score:1)
Tiago
Re:The day the music died indeed (Score:1)
Negotiating priviliges (Score:2)
-E
unless you need to make a living off music (Score:1)
Re:unless you need to make a living off music (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:unless you need to make a living off music (Score:1, Insightful)
And, by the way, if you're not gigging at least four nights out of the week, your band is a hobby. You should have a fucking day job.
Re:unless you need to make a living off music (Score:1)
Re:The day the music died indeed (Score:2)
During it's heyday (late 1998, IIRC), it was my only site for music resources and lyrics. I'd download the mp3, and printout the lyrics for digesting at my leisure. If I really enjoyed hte music, I'd buy it. I find music infintely more enjoyable when I can understand what's being said and can interpret the music.
Then, the Harry Fox Agency decided that lyrics.ch was making money off it's copyright, and that was bad, bad, bad. Never mind that lyrics.ch only made enough money to keep the site open, and never mind that the people downloading these lyrics were primarily doing so for their own fair use.
The ideal thing to do, would have been to say "hey, this thing works, rather well in fact, and people like it." Make sure you're tracking the songs people look at, and charge lyrics.ch for the royalties -- if money became a big problem, make it a subscribtion site. But, no, HFA had to kill it outright. They were so worried that someone would print out their valuable lyrics (even if the royalty was paid) that they crippled the site entirely. First, they took it down for almost a year, which is an eternity in internet time, allowing many people to forget about it and many others to find alternate sources (like google). When it came up, you couldn't print the lyrics, and you couldn't copy and paste them to print them. Add to that, the lyrics scrolled at a rate inconsistent with the beat of the song and was uncontrollable. Utterly useless. So, people stopped coming around. Now, HFA says there isn't enough demand to keep it open. No shit dumbass, I wonder why.
So, HFA could have done it right, gotten itself richer and enriched artists in the process. Instead it insisted on being draconian with it's IP and now artists as well as the HFA are suffering because people haven't stopped looking for lyrics, they just look for them in places other than lyrics.ch -- places where they can actually use the lyrics they download.
Google is a _huge_ lyrics search engine (Score:2, Informative)
Somebody always has it.
Re:Google is a _huge_ lyrics search engine (Score:1)
If anyone has this, please try to defeat Slashdot's imaginative Spam armoring and mail me.
Re:Google is a _huge_ lyrics search engine (Score:2, Informative)
Or click here, but be warned how easy it is to hide goats in Google cache links.
http://www.google.com/search?q=cache:jJqnIl36RDU:
Re:Google is a _huge_ lyrics search engine (Score:1)
(But no goats, much to my disappointment)
Re:Google is a _huge_ lyrics search engine (Score:1)
Ah well, one lives and learns.
Re:Google is a _huge_ lyrics search engine (Score:2)
That was the reason I've always used lyrics.ch. I don't think your method will work at all for finding a song based on the lyrics within it.
Re:Google is a _huge_ lyrics search engine (Score:1)
The main problem is that Google does not have true phrase searching. You can demonstrate this by searching for something in quotation marks, then looking at the highlighted search terms on a cached page. (It's also mentioned on Google somewhere).
-Kevin
Re:Google is a _huge_ lyrics search engine (Score:2)
-jhp
Re:google can't search properly (Score:2, Informative)
Not a huge loss - they were gone anyway. (Score:5, Interesting)
Basic order of the events was this:
1. They had a nice lyrics website with every lyric for just about every somewhat well-known song.
2. Someone in the Industry didn't like it.
3. The Industry asked them to remove some songs.
4. Site maintainers couldn't.
5. After largish mess, the site reopened in a vastly less useful form - most of the lyrics (that weren't "copyright checked") were unavailable, and the remainder of the lyrics were displayed using Java applet that didn't allow printing or stuff. Lyrics themselves were encrypted.
6. Since it couldn't really be used, it stopped being an useful resource...
Some time later, they proposed doing the same thing to Napster. "Make them stop distributing our copyrighted works for free and make them use a format that no one will use when there's other (admittedly less 'easy' but at least non-crippled) alternatives available."
However, unlike Napster, lyrics.ch was an "ethical" service, even when it bordered on the dark edge of the international copyright law.
I really don't see what problem the song copyright holders have with distributing lyrics and guitar tabs - Especially when they're not selling that information themselves. (I would be really happy if all CDs would come with lyrics... or, alternatively, the musicians would learn to pronounce the words clearly enough so we dumb foreigners could make any sense of them =)
Re:Not a huge loss - they were gone anyway. (Score:5, Insightful)
musicians would learn to pronounce the words clearly enough so we dumb foreigners could make any sense of them =)
I'd just be happy if the dumb fsck radio dj's would tell you what songs they've played.
East coast, Mid-west, West Coast, it's the same all over, damn few will tell you, which I really fail to understand, since the RIAA are so rabid about profits, but you can't by music you don't know whose or what it is! I've gone years not buying a CD because all I get is dumb looks when I try to describe it in music shops. "Well it goes, hmm hmm hmmmmm hmm hmmmm and lada dee dum dum doo doo doowop"
After the lawyers, I've got a pretty good idea who should be next up against the wall when the revolution comes.
Re:Not a huge loss - they were gone anyway. (Score:1)
Damn right. It once took one year for me to find out what what and whose that cool song they once played was... For all I care, I would have bought all the albums from that bad the next business day if they had bothered to tell the song name.
Back when it was on the playlists more often, they never told the performer or the name, both of which would have been much appreciated since web searches weren't too fruitful... =)
..alas, I also wish they'd play older songs; I recently discovered one song I really liked when it was on radio When I Was A Little Kid, and had forgotten it already... =)
(And now that I've started whining and ranting, I might also want to express my desire for the record shops to also sell older and more exotic music, not just the new records. Don't blame me for my love and frequent use of Freenet and WWW mp3z SiT3z; if the record stores would sell more computer/video game soundtrack CDs, I'd be more than happy to buy them. For some reason, ordering CDs from outside the country sounds awfully costly compared to simple websearch and couple of hours of downloading!)
Dj's around the world.... (Score:2)
Is this just stupidity, vanity, or some vague and low-tech form of copy protection? Any DJ's out there that can answer?
It is so bad here that I no longer listen to the radio for any length of time (just in the mornings, for about 2 songs, on my clock radio. That way, the annoyance factor of the DJ's helps me wake up). I listen entirely to my own music collection the rest of the time.
These idiots seem to forget that if we aren't listening, we aren't pumping up their ad revenues. Of course, this also makes it hard to hear new music.
Re:Dj's around the world.... (Score:5, Informative)
When I started, I was instructed to talk over the beginning of the song. The reason for this was that most people don't recognise the beginning of the song (maybe because all the DJ's talk over it?) so listeners might change the station looking for something else, and you're not really wrecking the song, because you don't have two voices competing for attention (crosstalk is very hard to understand). It also kept us from playing background music while we talked (if you notice, almost no DJ just talks without something going on the background -- supposedly it makes the patter more interesting to the ADHD listeners). We all hated the background beats, which were universally lame, so we talked over the song instead. Keep in mind, it was considered really amazing if you could consistently "nail" your patter so it stopped just as the singer starting singing. The problem with is is, sometimes you slip and talk over the beginning of the song -- which was very, very bad. I really don't think that this was some lame form of copy protection, it was just trying to keep listeners.
Which, of course, is the reason they don't tell you what song is playing. Perversely, you usually aren't allowed to "back announce" any songs on the radio. This is because you are supposed to focus on what you are going to be playing, not what you've already played. The logic is, if you talk about upcoming songs, people stick around to hear those songs, if you talk about the ones previously played, they go looking elsewhere because the song they wanted to hear was just played. You also aren't allowed to cut in in the middle of a block of music to announce songs, because people want to hear music, not you talking. On top of that, you're supposed to call attention to the lastest hit (called an 'A' or 'B' song), so you only announce it, and not the songs that follow. Using the logic above, only the first song gets announced, and you never know what's played after it. Of course, you can always call the DJ -- but they never answer the phone, because listeners who call in represent a very small minority and aren't important. As a DJ I was allowed to do whatever I wanted with callers, ignore them, abuse them, ask for nudie pictures, you name it.
Perverse logic, I know, but that's the why of it.
Re:Dj's around the world.... (Score:1)
Re:Dj's around the world.... (Score:2)
However, most of our songs were listed in this format:
0:12/3:45/0:45 [name of song] F
This meant the song had 12 seconds of lead-in time before the singer started singing, 3 minutes and 45 seconds of actual runtime, and 45 seconds of trailing music where the artist didn't sing at all -- the leading and trailing music could be cut off entirely or talked over, your descretion. Also, sometimes there was a notation, like "start at
Re:Dj's around the world.... (Score:1)
Re:Dj's around the world.... (Score:2)
I usually only listen to the radio while driving, and that's why I'll have a pile of tapes (no CD yet in my pickup) when I head off on a 800 mile drive for vacation.
I've never liked DJ patter over music, it's like nails on a chalkboard. I've supposed it's because DJ's have a boring job and just want to say something before they go mad. Oh, hey, why don't I alphabetize the Elton John albums again...
We have a local station, mostly pop, www.cd93.com, which does provide 3 hours of music listing, sometimes lyrics, but it's not much help if you're out driving. You can listen to the station over the web, too.
Re:Dj's around the world.... (Score:1)
Re:Dj's around the world.... (Score:2)
In fact, in every hour's playlist (you didn't think the DJ picks the songs, did you? They are all picked by computer) there are always a few very old songs ('C' and 'D' songs) that if there's enough time, they'll be played -- if not, they get dropped.
Re:Dj's around the world.... (Score:2)
I miss the radio station in my hometown (WHMH). They made a point of not talking over the music & play any song on an album, not just the hits. They also regularly announced the songs before & after playing. On more than a few occasions, I called in to ask what the last song or song before was & they were happy to tell me. It's only 60 miles from where I live now, but I can't pick it up.
Here in Minneapolis & St Paul, the biggest 3 radio stations are owned by ABC/Disney, and most of the rest by Clear Channel.
Re:Dj's around the world.... (Score:2)
Re:Dj's around the world.... (Score:2)
Well, I've been on and off a campus radio dj.
Campus stations don't do this because we're trying to sell records and concert tickets. We play music that we really, really like: we think the artists should be supported.
We also back-announce. Actually, I normally always back-announce. I hate to let people know what's coming. :)
Commercial stations, on the other hand, are trying to keep listeners. Therefore, they ideally want nothing but Happy Sounds. Information is not a Happy Sound.
I can't imagine living in a town without a campus station. Commercial radio sucks.
Re:Not a huge loss - they were gone anyway. (Score:2)
Actually, here in New Orleans we do have a station that tells you the song title and artists name. On 105.3 at the beginning of every song, you hear a little chime and then the artist and the title are announced. To be honest, I didn't much care for it when the first started doing it, but now I rather like it. Now, I really do have a better idea of which bands I should love and which I should hate. (Now I just hate the little chime sound effect and wish they would find something more original.)
I'm lucky (Score:1)
Re:Not a huge loss - they were gone anyway. (Score:1)
Re:Song names (Score:2, Informative)
In Europe, we have a thing called RDS - Radio Data system - I don't know if you have it in the states. RDS carries a thing called RT (radio text).
Virtually all radio stations support it. You press a button on the receiver and it tells you what song is playing, the weather, usually a url of the station.All new receivers basically support it as well.
Another thing you can do is just write down the time and date and then check the playlist on the website or send the radio station an e-mail. I have done that several times before I had an RT-capable radio or am in the car where only RDS is supported (automatic frequency switching, radio station name display) but not radio text as to not distract the driver).
Re:Not a huge loss - they were gone anyway. (Score:4, Informative)
The lyrics are not encrypted. They are stored in some kind of vector graphics format, much like Windows Metafiles.
Try it: Select a song, and look at the HTML code. It will load two CAB files, one with the Java applet, the other with the lyrics. Each page is stored in a file with as extension '.rpf'. Strip out the non-ASCII characters and you're left with the lyrics.
If you want to do it the "right" way, you can disassemble the Java code, find out the file format and write a proper reader. It's quite trivial.
Re:Not a huge loss - they were gone anyway. (Score:2)
I actually used it to find the band and title of songs after hearing an unidentified snippet on the radio. Thank god, since lyrics.ch has been shut down, now I can't identify any songs that I heard but wasn't told the title. This should boost cd sales.
Hmmm... (Score:1)
NO WAY (Score:1)
Ease up?! (Score:2)
Google helps... (Score:1)
Shouldn't be much of a problem getting the lyrics. someone somewhere will have it, and if not, the google cache will surely have it.
--
Does google cache it's cache ?
Ah damn. Now you tell me. (Score:1)
In any case, I had no idea about this place until now, when they are shutting it down.
Typical.
Another one who has bitten to dust... (Score:1)
He had an archive of 18000 dutch lyrics. He ran this free archive for about five years and was forced to take it down by the Musicopy foundation.
Good intentions are not always appriciated...
http://www.giga.nl/walter/gnsa/ (dutch only)
Hasn't been decent for years (Score:5, Informative)
After Lyrics.ch got raided it had no use. For a long time there were no lyrics up. When they did get lyrics back the site was rendered sterile. There were so few lyrics you had a better chance using Yahoo! or Altavista (no Google back then) to find the lyrics.
When Songfile took over it was no better. Many lyrics are up, but I don't want to liscence a song just to know if it is the one I am thinking of.
Is it just me, or does the RIAA make you feel like you're being shat upon? Almost any other industry would be enthused people used your service for such things.
Re:Hasn't been decent for years (Score:5, Insightful)
And that is the point the idiots totally fail to see, (and sadly so do many of those posting here at slashdot).
That's exactly what I used to use the lyrichs server for. I would hear some words to a song, not know what it was, then go look it up so I could purchase the CD.
This was a unique search engine. There really was no other way to figure out a song's title and artist based on what you heard. What is wrong with HFA? Are they REALLY this stupid, thinking the main use of this site was so that people could somehow rip-off the artists? I'm sure any cover band who wants to play a song would buy the sheet music, with lyrics, if they needed to. But you can't do what lyrics.ch did if your only resource is to buy sheet music. You can't search lyrics on paper to figure out a songname, just like you can't go to a library and read EVERY BOOK just to figure out where a certain passage was quoted.
Re:Hasn't been decent for years (Score:2)
Re:Hasn't been decent for years (Score:1)
Perhaps you forget that we're talking about lyrics, not the actual music. With Napster, you actually could just download mp3s, have the music, and never pay the artists a dime. All you get from lyrics.ch is, well, the lyrics. It's not at all the same.
I mean it's not as if anybody thinks to him/herself "I really like this song, but I'm feeling like a cheapskate today, so I'll just go read the lyrics instead"
Harry Fux... oops I mean Fox (Score:3, Informative)
Sorry, Timothy. It's curtains for this site. (Score:4, Insightful)
It was killed because the big companies had already realised (pre-Napster) that in order to continue spewing the silliness they tried to allege in courts, they had to control every aspect of the music they published and take every case of "infringement" seriously. US law requires this to some extent, but Sony, Warner and Bertelsmann are willing to go that extra mile.
The spread of lyrics for any song -- even from this week's latest gyrating girl or cool neat-o boy group -- enhances sales. However, in order to control the copyrights, the publishers will not even license rights to reproduce these lyrics. Instead, you must go to the band's official site (usually within the record company's domain), where you can not only see the lyrics (if you provide enough personal information), but you also have the "opportunity" to buy lots more merchandise. You are a "consumer".
So forget something sensible, like the centralised, optimised and simplified lyrics.ch database. Give up on ideas that make life a little easier for "consumers" but might deny a copyright holder a possible extra $0.00013 from a banner impression.
Of course, you can always search Google for "<band name> AND <song title> AND (lyrics OR text OR words)" and find the lyrics elsewhere. Works for finding guitar tabs, too. But the centralised database which was organised to provide you with the information you wanted -- how you wanted it -- instead of advertising and enticement to further purchase is history.
I already mourned the loss of this site almost four years ago. What HFA did to it once they got control made it unusable. I haven't been there since.
woof.
If I had a penny for every Goth girl Web page with Cure lyrics, I'd have $89,317.74
True (Score:2, Informative)
Yeah yeah (Score:4, Insightful)
So stop buying their stuff.
Stop buying CDs. Make your own music. See live music. Stop buying DVDs. Stop seeing blockbusters. Go to the theatre. Support your local independent filmmakers.
That will hurt the big guns and support those who really need it. Who cares if you don't get to see or hear the latest stuff: it's mostly rubbish, you certainly won't suffer for the lack of it, and hell, you might even learn something new.
Re:Yeah yeah (Score:2)
Think before you post next time.
Famous Last Call == You Know What! (Score:1)
a single voice cries "Where're The Fscking Mirrors???"
Re:Famous Last Call == You Know What! (Score:1)
It's not the International Lyrics Server anyways. (Score:5, Interesting)
Then you were never looking at the International Lyrics Server. You were looking at the thing that killed [harryfox.com] the International Lyrics Server.
Did anybody ever mirror the original ILS before the enemy destroyed it? Does anybody have backup tapes/CD-Rs?
Since the shutdown (and make no mistake, songfile.com was never useful as anything other than a way to find out that yes, Harry Fox owned the words, and wanted you to know they owned the words, and didn't want you to read them - or that they didn't own the words and therefore you couldn't read them) seems that bandwidth has gotten accessible enough that such a thing, if it exists, could be discreetly distributed via one of the many P2P applications, or posted to USENET via an open SOCKS proxy. Diskspace has also gotten cheap enough that individuals could host their own local copies of the pre-Foxsized ILS on their own hard drives.
Not that I'd encourage anyone to do such a thing. But it'd be kinda nice to see if someone were to independently come up with the idea of doing it.
Re:It's not the International Lyrics Server anyway (Score:2, Insightful)
Or even better, put them in some sort of de-centralized system (freenet? gnutella?) that isn't susceptable as someone like napster and the like.
Sadly, I didn't mirror anything from the original server, though it got me a lot of the information I needed at the time...
Some email addresses at harry fox (Score:4, Informative)
clientrelations@harryfox.com
licensing@harryfox.com
index@harryfox.com
pr@nmpa.org
I guess (Score:2)
This is the same deal as (g)napster. I absolutely hate listening to the radio, so the Internet is the only way for me to listen to something before I buy it. The music industry is making this more difficult, therefore, I buy less music.
When lyrics were more easily available and MP3s were more easy to get a hold of, I bought more music.
It never ceases to amaze me how hostile this industry is to it's best customers...
Re:I guess (Score:1)
Re:I guess (Score:4, Insightful)
The time when I bought most albums was when I had a nice broadband connection and Napster was in its heyday -- in conjunction with cdnow.com it let me listen to lots of artists which I'd not heard about before. Now I buy much less music, and from a narrower base of artists.
The year that the music industry was declaring that file sharing would destroy music buying, revenues from CD sales went *up*.
What a good solution of using an applet to decrypt (Score:4, Informative)
The site was a link resource site which used an applet to "decrypt" the links they had, in order to prevent link napping.
The applet wanted to perform some things not supported by the applet sandbox IE prompted me to give the applet the required privileges.
Since I'm not keen on running code from "John Doe" I wanted to see what it did and thus decompiled the applet. It took me about 15 minutes to CP (cut'n paste) the decoding code into a new app which created link pages in normal HTML without an applet.
The same was true for this particular applet. With a few modifications, there is now a "Save lyrics" button on the applet
Without saying, using an applet as the means of decrypting content which one wants to protect is not a good idea at all.
Re:What a good solution of using an applet to decr (Score:1)
They both contain beliefs, but religions are based on faith, while science is based on observation. Very big difference.
Re:What a good solution of using an applet to decr (Score:1)
Neat, huh?
Re:What a good solution of using an applet to decr (Score:2)
Just for the record, you do realize that you're now a felon under the DMCA, right? Not to say anything about the ethics of the situation, but The Man could throw you in the stripey hole for years, should this come to their attention.
Pretty absurd, huh? Write your congresscritters. Contribute to EFF. Fight to reverse the DMCA, before you end up fighting for reduced bail.
Re:What a good solution of using an applet to decr (Score:2)
Just for the record, you do realize that you're now a felon under the DMCA, right?
Just for the record, you're wrong.
Re:What a good solution of using an applet to decr (Score:2)
Re:What a good solution of using an applet to decr (Score:2)
Re:What a good solution of using an applet to decr (Score:2)
Re:What a good solution of using an applet to decr (Score:2)
"Commercial advantage" is pretty broad, and can include something as simple as *enabling* the use of copyrighted material without permission, even if you personally do not make commercial use of that material. Just ask Dmitri Skylarov.
I think you'd have a pretty tough time convincing a jury of that. I'm certainly not convinced. Another point to be made is that the DMCA is not enforcible as interstate commerce when there is no commerce taking place. The government would then have to rely on the copyright clause, and fair use would almost certainly kick in.
What Sklyarov (!) allegedly did was not even remotely similar. He was allegedly engaging in international commerce for profit. That is a much different situation, from a constitutional standpoint, from a legal (DMCA) standpoint, and from a standpoint of juror sympathy.
Best lyrics server: Google (Score:5, Informative)
Shoot all the lawyers and let Satan sort them out! (Score:1)
But we are to blame the most for we elect to office these lawyers.
Maybe someone out there could write a Napster like program except for searching for lyrics or a server like the CDDB. I know there has been talk of adding lyrics to the CDDB (Compact Disk database).
Songmeanings (Score:4, Informative)
I however have been using SongMeanings [songmeanings.net] as of late. For you Winamp users, there is also a plugin that will display the lyrics for your currently playing song.
There are some songs that I would have thought would be on there that aren't, but you can always add your own if they are missing.
Same thing happened to OLGA (Score:5, Informative)
I wrote a paper on this in college. Here are the pertinent parts.
{snip)
OLGA's Dilemma
On June 9th, 1998, The Online Guitar Archive (OLGA) closed its doors. They closed because the Harry Fox Agency, a representative of music publishers, threatened litigation against OLGA on the basis that OLGA distributes copyrighted material unlawfully. According to Margaret Drum of the Harry Fox Agency: "Some sites have been closed down because they contain copyrighted material . . . the copyright owner can distribute their own [copyrighted material] - it can't be done by other people, and that's why it's considered an infringement" (Stutz). Drum has a valid point, and one that is relevant to a very important part her Agency's purpose: protecting the rights of music distributors. From such a specific (and biased) point of view as hers, the offering of a free alternative to something that many music distributors market is clearly a destructive thing. Drum and other associates at the Harry Fox Agency need to pick up a guitar and start trying to play one of their favorite songs. Commercially available guitar instructional material is mostly in the form of plain sheet music. Sheet music is extremely difficult to understand if you are a beginning musician. The inherent value to the guitar tablature OLGA offers is that it is easy to understand. And because it is easy to understand, even beginning guitarists can use it and learn how to play songs. Even for experienced guitarists, it makes the process of learning a new song easier and quicker. It is easy to see that by making the knowledge available to beginners and experienced users alike, OLGA is doing nothing to harm the music industry. It is helping it by allowing a greater number of people share in the pleasing feeling of learning and playing a song you heard on the radio. It could easily be construed that tablature is used to "teach" beginning guitarists how to play a song. Therefore, according to current copyright law the use of the material would be a "fair use."
The case of the Online Guitar Archive has made it clear that the current copyright laws are out of date and need to be revised. The dividing line between what is fair use and what isn't fair use is blurred. The answer is not to simply amend current United States Code the way the NET Act of 1997 does. The answer must lie in clearly spelling out what is and what isn't fair use of copyrighted material.
Re:Same thing happened to OLGA (Score:1)
Re:Same thing happened to OLGA (Score:1)
Re:Same thing happened to OLGA (Score:1)
Not necessarily, but the "necessarily" is why we have the judicial system.
When I have used OLGA it was because I was a beginning guitarist and hadn't yet learned to figure out music on my own. No intention to resell anything - the only intention was to learn and to better my skill. THIS IS THE DEFINITION OF FAIR USE. I'm quite certain this is also the experience of thousands of others who frequented the site.
I would challenge Harry Fox agency to show me a single case where OLGA has been used to harm a recording artist. This sort of strongarm action is one of the things that makes people distrust the recording industry at large.
Re:Same thing happened to OLGA (Score:1)
A nice repository (Score:1)
God bless transcribers.
http://www.sing365.com/index.html
Just like the OLGA (Score:1)
We tried to license them (Score:2, Informative)
dude OLGA!!! (Score:1)
Record Industry running scared. (Score:3, Insightful)
The only musicians who support the recording industry are those who've gotten really rich or hope to do so. But, like any gold rush, the rock and roll gold rush is over. Too many people now know how to play an electric guitar. Musicians can still be successful, but the days of instant riches for the lucky few are coming to a close.
That is how it should be. Talented, hard working people will always be able to make a living. The musicians who figure out how to make money w/o the record companies will be fruitful and happy.
The record industry is in a mad rush to frighten people out of their fair-use rights, using legal terrorism.
Harry Fox (Score:1)
More likely to be Chrysoprase (Score:2)
Given that ``he'' appears to have a head with rocks in it rather than music with rocks in it, I'd say he was closer to Chrysoprase the loan-shark troll. (-:
Quote of the day (Score:2)
Quote of the day: ``Kill all of the lawyers! Let Satan sort them out!'' Where's a flaming arrow when you really need one? (-:
Added Value (Score:1)
Another lyrics site (Score:2, Informative)
The Archive of Misheard Lyrics (Score:1)
Why can't I get Sheet Music decent sheet music? (Score:1)
Maybe I could license the song, but none of the license categories seem to apply (no, I don't want to make 500 recordings of it minimum) Another annoying thing is movie soundtracks. Anyone ever try finding the score for the theme to Enemy of the State or Twister? Sheesh! I'm starting to think Harry Fox should be shot (but nah.. that wouldn't do anything - there's always another lawyer-money-grubber in line.)
Say it isn't so (Score:2)
One thing I wonder about: many of the songs at lyrics.ch are public domain - songs which have been around long enough that there is no copyright on them anymore. Does any intrepid soul have the wherewithal to mirror just those songs? Or will LarryWhoever do it as a public service?
Alas, it's not possible... (Score:4, Interesting)
It can't be copied unless you somehow intercepted the packets - and even then, that's a lot of work when some other website will probably have printed the lyrics anyway.
So long, lyrics.ch. We hardly knew ya.
Re:Alas, it's not possible... (Score:2)
If you don't know what you're talking, don't talk.
If you looked at the HTML of a lyrics.ch page, you would see that it linked to two CAB files: one containing the actual display applet, the other the lyrics in an (unencrypted) vector graphics file with 'rpf' extension (one per page).
(I say vector graphics, because it supports a lot of drawing primitives, but lyrics.ch only uses "set font" and "render text".)
If you just strip all non-ASCII characters, you get the lyrics and some junk (therefore, unencrypted). If you disassemble the Java code to figure out the file format, you can easily write a proper reader.
It's some work, but you only have to do it once.
Re:wget anyone? (Score:1)
hey you.. get on with your life (Score:1, Offtopic)
It's not Tuesday morning anymore. It's not Tuesday afternoon anymore. Thank God its not Thursday because I could never get the hang of Thursdays.
steve
Re:Let me get this straight... (Score:1, Insightful)
6000+ people dying in any way whatsoever is a human "tragedy". As another post said, more people died yesterday in equally morbid ways. What's special about the American saga is that the American people believed without a doubt that their safety and cherished freedom was untouchable.
During East Timor's crisis, my country, Australia, sent thousands of peace keepers into the trouble areas. We evacuated hundreds, if not thousands of refugees from East Timor, and returned those who wanted to go back safe and sound after the conflict ended. The statistic (and I hate to use that word) that was ignored most was this: over 20,000 people were killed before we lifted an administrative finger to help.
Those figures are ignored because East Timor and the region isn't considered a "civilised" region if the Westernised sense. East Timer took maybe 15 minutes of TV news a day here. America took over 4 days, non-stop. Why is this?
America, the free country, whose populace is on the whole ignorant to other country's racial wars, just had it's foot trod on, and now expects every other country to pay complete and utter attention while it rants about destroying economies and further un-balancing the world's trade weight.
Now, I'm no bigot on either side here. Australia plays just a small part of the global game, but it's culture is very close to America's. I won't pretend that I'm not a heavy-handed consumer, and sure I enjoy the freedom a "democracy" provides. However, the world is more than the US.
Next time Timor erupts, or something else just as horrific surfaces and gets a whopping 5 minutes of airtime just before the new series of Friends or reruns of Buffy, maybe paying a little more attention to what your country had to do with it, both to help and to provoke. Iran & Iraq came about because of meddling. Hussein was funded by the States. Osama was funded by the States.
Maybe not double-dipping in every global situation would keep America safe? Democracy, freedom, and all those other buzzwords come to be because somewhere, someone paid a price in the beginning. Call it tall poppy syndrome, but if America wants to be as loud and arrogant in its' world view, it should also realise that others will want to take it down.
This was coming... Tuesday was just the day it arrived. 6000+ died not because they deserved to, but because of Governmental arrogance that one was right and all else is wrong... and both sides contributed to this.