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Music Media

EMI Promises Downloadable Music 305

SataiCam writes "The Economist has an article up referring to EMI's plans to implement digital music downloading starting on December 1 through a whole host of 'distributors'. They claim it will allow users to get music in 'the formats they are demanding' (ogg?), to burn copies of songs, and download them to other devices. Here's the press release from EMI."
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EMI Promises Downloadable Music

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  • by teamhasnoi ( 554944 ) <teamhasnoi@CURIE ... minus physicist> on Friday November 15, 2002 @01:34AM (#4675050) Journal
    Just don't expect to *listen* to it anywhere - the files won't play on any computer, portable device, or cd player. It's their new business plan!
    • ogg = format people are demanding? I don't think there are many people who are demanding ogg who won't actually see this post on slashdot.. I know ogg is good, but seriously, no one outside of the tech community has any idea what it is..
      • not entirely true.. several people I know outside the tech community use ogg. I may have had something to do with it though..
        • "not entirely true.. several people I know outside the tech community use ogg. I may have had something to do with it though.."

          Isn't this how the word is spread about these things? How do you think MP3 became popular? Grassroots promotion, one person at a time, is how we can popularise ogg vorbis and other goodness like mozilla.

          I feel better knowing that I have shown many IE users the light. Everyone should do the same in a non-zealotry manner.

    • actually, the article states that some content will be available to burn onto cd, or put on portable devices...
    • Well, at least that distinguishes the DRM-ed music from OGG, where files that won't play on any portable device or cd player has nothing to do with any business plan.
      • now that an integer-based Ogg Vorbis decoder (called Tremor) has been developed, one of the main hurdles for hardware Ogg support has been removed. Tremor source code here. [xiph.org] That pretty much leaves two other areas as far as I can tell, artist support [sejus.com] and customer demand. Hopefully everyone aware of the benefits of Ogg is making an effort towards one or more of these areas. And thanks to the codec developers and everyone generally involved in Ogg!
    • Download it.

      Open the encrypted file.

      Sheet music comes out your printer.

      You must purchase their ePiano to play it.

    • by joe_bruin ( 266648 ) on Friday November 15, 2002 @03:19AM (#4675444) Homepage Journal
      i've actually met with some guys from emi in the course of my work regarding secure music. they seemed to be pretty much know what's going on. not that i like these guys very much, nor the concept of drm. but they were very reasonable. they understood that any drm they put out will be immediately broken. they told me they know sdmi is crap. they understood that they can't shaft the consumer with too many restrictions or difficulties to use or transfer, or excessive charges. they understood that people want music on their portables. these guys are not engineers, but music people.
      they also understood that convincing their management to give up any restrictions is not going to be easy. i would say though, that emi is the most forward looking label out there. they're probably gonna take quite a few missteps on their way, and us slashdotters are gonna beat them over the head for it. but they're actually working on it, and not trying just to fuck us over (well, not all of them). maybe one day, they'll actually find the right balance (wow, late night optimism. who woulda thunk it?)

      my favorite quote: "sometimes i think 'fuck it, why don't we just give it all for free, download all you want'".
  • well (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday November 15, 2002 @01:35AM (#4675054)
    Now all of us complaining about our rights to songs have an opportunity to put our $$ where our mouth is... Will you guys pay for downloadable music? If this doesn't work it will be a good sign that we are all just a bunch of pirates, or will it?
    • Re:well (Score:2, Interesting)

      by LilGuy ( 150110 )
      I'll be the first in line to pay. I'll still download some stuff for free if I can't get the quality I want or can't find a particular song, but I'll definately pay for some because I believe this is a step forward for the music industry.
      • I'll gladly pay for downloadable music if it's in OGG or (preferably) MP3 format. I'm not paying $20 for an album, though. Those days are gone as far as I'm concerned. Lately all I've bought from the store are $10 or less items, just for something different to listen to. Let me listen to music at 96kbps and if I like it, I want to pick song by song what I want for say $1 a piece. Or a whole album (with good songs but includes filler) for say $10. I couldn't see people pirating too much at reasonable prices with unlimited usage terms. Let me reiterate that try before you buy (read: listening to the whole song at a lower sample rate) is a key feature IMO.

        By the way, why didn't they just come out and say what format it would be in instead of being vague? The omission only makes their statement sound like a half truth.
    • I will pay only if i have access to every song i do on p2p. Im nto going to pay for only 1/10th of what i have on p2p. Of course they cant get it all but also a lot of p2p is stuff nobody wants to sell anymore/ever.
    • Re:well (Score:3, Informative)

      by funkdancer ( 582069 )
      I must be a bit anal about sound quality and find even 128kb/s a bit lacking - the Grado Labs [gradolabs.com] SR325s [gradolabs.com] I have at work are almost a bit too for my own good in this respect. So I'm not too much into music piracy and do often have gigs left of my 3GB monthly ADSL quota.

      However, CDs copied to the Media Player using the highest quality setting are pretty darned good - I can't discern any difference in quality.

      If they provide say 192kb/s WMA files, I'd be inclined to buying music if I could really use it for all my personal uses; burn to CD, copy to my work and home PCs. And of course if, I could actually find something interesting to buy! (I find most of the 'run of the mill music' being published these days more annoying than anything).

      The price must be right though, considerably less than for real CDs. Even though I don't really know where to put my 400+ CD collection anymore, I still like getting the physical product. E.g., I have a very nice collection of Pet Shop Boys, Faithless, Depeche Mode and a few other favourite artists; there's something to be said about the physical product...

    • Re:well (Score:3, Interesting)

      I just want my $5 CDs!!

      Seriously, CDs cost (materially) !

    • Re:well (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Xthlc ( 20317 )
      I DO pay -- $20 / month for emusic.com. And I'd be willing to pay even more (say $35-$40 / mo) for something with a more comprehensive catalog.

      However, here's the catch: it's gotta be subscription, not pay-per-download, and it's gotta be unrestricted usage. Gone are the days when I would pay $16.95 for a shitty cd. The key thing for me (and I think most other people) about p2p or emusic is being able to explore a much bigger world of music without having to risk paying for something I don't like.

      If they try to pass *anything* else off as competition for p2p, they're delusional.
    • Re:well (Score:5, Interesting)

      by thoth_amon ( 560574 ) on Friday November 15, 2002 @03:06AM (#4675400)
      If the reality turns out to be as good as the appearance, I definitely plan to reward EMI in two ways:

      1. Buy all their music in my collection that is not as yet paid for, and
      2. Stop sharing it -- since there is now a cost-effective and convenient way for anyone to get it for themselves.

      This is contingent on the following:

      1. No DRM in the files, ideally OGG or MP3 files.
      2. High-quality recordings (i.e. 128-bit is quite marginal, I'm hoping for 256-bit or at least an option to choose bitrate).
      3. Reasonable cost. $5 per song is too much, $1 per song would be awesome.

      I don't want to get into the whole you're-a-pirate-no-I'm-not argument, but I do believe there's a balance between producers of content and consumers, and this balance is created not so much by the free market as by a matter of conscious choice in society. It is not theft for the people -- you and I -- to decide we no longer wish to offer the same terms to copyright holders that we once did. It made sense at one time, but as the average individual increasingly gains the ability to copy data, the cost to us as a society in giving absolute protection to copyright holders increases dramatically. This is true not only in enforcement issues, but in the simple ability of millions of people to enjoy from and build on copyrighted works.

      This doesn't mean we don't pay the piper anymore, but it does mean the balance has forever changed. Pretending the old rules still make sense just doesn't fly anymore. EMI seems to be making the first concrete move toward acknowledging that reality, and if the details work out, I say kudos to them, and I'll be their best customer.
  • As in, we did a user survey, and they all are in favor of WMA? I'll be surprised if they sell Oggs.
  • At one point in the story they mention that this is downloadable SECURE DIGITAL music. When will the music industry catch on? People want their MP3 (and ogg around here of course). Guessing this is destined to be another failure.
    • Even so I still think this is a step forward. Perhaps the next step will be to make the SECURE DIGITAL music cheap enough that you won't even want to bother pirating anymore. Perhaps allowing you to buy more than 1 license so you can put it on your computer AND your mp3 player.
      • by bsartist ( 550317 ) on Friday November 15, 2002 @01:56AM (#4675160) Homepage
        Perhaps allowing you to buy more than 1 license so you can put it on your computer AND your mp3 player.

        "Allowing," my ass. I can do that right now, with a CD I've purchased once - and it's perfectly legal. What you're talking about is requiring me to buy multiple licenses in order to retain the same functionality that I already have - and it's bullshit.
      • The reason why secure digital is bad is not because people want to pirate it. It's because secure digital means secure against me using it where I want to - on my iPod, on my iBook, and in my CD player, as I do with CDs.
    • I am all for open and/or de facto standards when it comes to the distribution of online music, but let's face it, the labels have to at least try to protect their material. It is inevitable, since the average executive will figure that one person will pay for a mp3 and then distribute it over conventional piracy routes. You have to admit, that is a very realistic (if not certain) possibility.

      As long as the companies distribute the players/decoders of their "secure" formats in a reasonable manner and for all major platforms, then I won't come down too hard on them.

  • It had to happen. (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Flyskippy1 ( 625890 ) on Friday November 15, 2002 @01:37AM (#4675064) Homepage
    Stubbornness can only last so long, it seems. It was inevitable that the Music industry would eventually realize that the old axiom "If you can't beat them, join them", is an old axiom for a reason.

    If they had thought about all of this five years ago, of course, they could have realized a lot more profit. But, I'm sure that they will throw money at it until they are competitive.

    The real question is, will they be able to guilt everybody into not pirating their music...
    • by ealar dlanvuli ( 523604 ) <froggie6@mchsi.com> on Friday November 15, 2002 @01:47AM (#4675111) Homepage

      The real question is, will they be able to guilt everybody into not pirating their music...


      Yes. Most people don't pirate music. Only a very small percent (perhaps 1% of the population) pirate enough music to fill an entire CD. Most people have a few mp3's that they got when trying napster and thats it.

      A perfect example of how much people care less about piratibility than portability (or convenience) is the apple iPod, it's trivial to pirate using it, yet I have never seen a single person who bothered to do so. Setting reasonable (copyright+fair use) restrictions on what you can do with the music you own pisses no one off. Making it so you pay the same amount for a "digital" file that plays on a single device as you do for a CD pisses lots of people off.

      I would be less impressed by their arguments if they didn't use them every other time a new media distribution method came avoidable. They are in the business of hurting the consumer, in exchange for the consumer letting themselves be hurt they enrich the public domain. It's a pretty simple model and I only worry about it when arbitrary people get called pirates.
      • by Gsus411 ( 544087 )
        1% of the population copies enough music to fill an entire CD? You obviously haven't been to a high school lately. At my school, I'd say half the cds people own are illegally burned.

        It's a high school, but youth compose a large enough chunk of the general population to push that figure to 25-30% by themselves.

        Just because the music industry does stupid and outrageous things, that doesn't mean that you have to use wildly inaccurate numbers to justify your claims.
        • by Zordak ( 123132 )
          that doesn't mean that you have to use wildly inaccurate numbers to justify your claims.
          If you want to be taken seriously, you should remember that trying to disprove what you consider an exaggeration with an truly gross exaggeration simply makes you look uneducated, illogical and narrow-minded. First, your observation that "half the CDs people own are illegally burned," even if true, is most likely limited to peers you interact with regularly. Since you are a Slashdot reader, we shall presume for the moment that you consider yourself technically adept, which implies that your friends are most likely of a similar demographic. This is a self-selecting poll, because those you are polling (your friends), are the group most likely to pirate music. Second, even if 100% of high shool students pirate music (they don't -- I have younger siblings in high school, and they do not pirate music), your assertion that high school students alone "push that figure to 25-30%" of the general population relies upon the ludicrous assumption that high school students, between the ages of 14 and 18, comprise between one in every three and one in every four members of the general population.

          The parent poster does not use any hard evidence to support his assertion, but in terms of probability, his "wildly inaccurate" assertion of 1% is much more tenable than your much-inflated assertion of 25-30%. Next time, take a few moments to think before posting.

      • Only a very small percent (perhaps 1% of the population) pirate enough music to fill an entire CD.

        What planet are YOU living on? What's your source? Where is the link to you source for that little statistic?

        Instead of making shit up, load up Kazaa and look at how many files are being shared. It's not all Chicken Pot Pie recipes. There is a big problem that needs a big fix. But whatever the fix is, it better involve letting people put their music where they want, when they want, or my wallet shall remain closed.

      • by goon america ( 536413 ) on Friday November 15, 2002 @02:47AM (#4675348) Homepage Journal
        Most people don't pirate music. Only a very small percent (perhaps 1% of the population) pirate enough music to fill an entire CD. Most people have a few mp3's that they got when trying napster and thats it.

        Most people don't buy music. Most people think napster was a web site called "napster.com" where you could just download whatever new-fangled mp3 music files you wanted. They heard about it on NPR.

        The 1% of the public that is pirating music used to be part of the 5% of the public that buys much new music at all (12-24 year olds). It's the music industry's own fault for marketing an overpriced product to a group with little spending money and a low value of their own time.

  • ...the music industry's long-standing tradition of royally screwing things up is set to continue...
    • the music industry's long-standing tradition of royally screwing things up is set to continue

      As is the music industry's long-standing tradition of royally screwing customers and the music industry's long-standing tradition of royally screwing artists.

  • Ogg? No. (Score:5, Informative)

    by kaosrain ( 543532 ) <root.kaosrain@com> on Friday November 15, 2002 @01:40AM (#4675081) Homepage
    They claim it will allow users to get music in 'the formats they are demanding' (ogg?)

    Unfortunantly, ogg isn't going to be the choice. The companies that ELI has signed this agreement with (Alliance, Ecast, FullAudio, Liquid Audio, Listen.com, Musicnet, Pressplay, Roxio, and Streamwaves) are all based around mp3s.

    -Kaos
    • I think that ogg would not help anyone. A small number of people would actually let ogg support be a deciding factor in their choise to subscribe. I want it but its not going to make me decide to pay if they support ogg.
    • by Alsee ( 515537 ) on Friday November 15, 2002 @08:56AM (#4676156) Homepage
      Unfortunantly, ogg isn't going to be the choice ... all based around mp3s.

      Unfortunately your score 5 post gives the misleading impression that they will be using MP3. If you read the press release you'll see: "capability to burn a limited number of personal copies". That means it's your standard DRM with the oh-so generous capability to put a couple of them on disk, and to import them into DRM-compliant portable devices a limited number of times.

      It seems the "the formats they are demanding" means Windows media format DRM, though I can't say for sure.

      -
  • by cscx ( 541332 ) on Friday November 15, 2002 @01:40AM (#4675084) Homepage
    They plan to release new software called "KaZaA"
    • Actually -- why the hell not? The labels could get together and run their own P2P network, with their own kazaa-like client, and for a fixed monthly fee, let everyone grab every MP3 they care to (making sure each is properly tagged with info that steers the user to a website where they can order the CD as an impulse purchase).

      That would be a good business model -- effectively getting customers to pay for advertising (free samples in the form of MP3s), while losing nothing -- the MP3s are already out there; this would be attractive for *reliability* (if they did it right).

      It would be especially good for back catalog items, if only they'd realise how much filetrading revolves around finding old, obscure, out of print titles.

      • EMIster? (Score:3, Interesting)

        This actually is the way EMI and other companies whining about p2p should be going. Not charging for the service - let them charge 20 bucks for the client, or for a one-time fee for access or something, and give people access to everything, with advertising linking mp3s to websites where they can buy records, stickers, shirts, panties, whatever, plus read bios, interviews, etc. Let people take the music freely; the music is already out there, and any network they build, there will be no way for them to keep the music on that network. The problem is they won't take the step of understanding that they aren't losing anything by doing this -- the music is and will be out there. Once they accept that they can think intelligently about ways to make more money. Until then they're pouring more and more time and money into stopping piracy which is a business model that is bound to fail. But their freakin egos are too big; they really believe they deserve 16 dollars every time some kid downloads a song. They can't see past that; or at least they've refused to so far.
  • Ogg (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward
    Ogg would be nice, but wouldn't you rather have something lossless, like FLAC [sourceforge.net]?
    • By the time one FLAC encoded song comes down on dialup, you could have worked the equivalent time at minimum wage and gotten the whole CD quicker.
    • And get only 50% compression? Personally i would like it as an option but i dont think i would use it much.
  • by happystink ( 204158 ) on Friday November 15, 2002 @01:42AM (#4675092)
    I am 100% confident that EMI is going to do what the public has been demanding for for ages and release their music in ogg format. Anyone who says that the inclusion of the ogg comment by the poster was ridiculous and just tossed in so the story would be accepted by the slashdot editors is insane and I do not believe them at all. It makes perfect sense to assume that EMI is going to release music in the widely-used ogg format. I know a lot of you nerds who just read slashdot all day might not realize, but everywhere in america,OGG is the hottest buzzword anywhere. Teens are spending their weekend having "ogging parties" where they download and trage ogg vorbis files, and even thousands of grandmas are enjoying "sharing" (WINK) their favourite old classics in ogg format.

    In summary, of course EMI is release the music in OGG format, why does the poster even need to ask! DUH.
  • Hmmmm (Score:5, Insightful)

    by mao che minh ( 611166 ) on Friday November 15, 2002 @01:43AM (#4675095) Journal
    A nice announcement, score one for the team, but I do not plan on supporting that company any time soon. The content of their now infamous email correspondance is still fresh in my mind.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday November 15, 2002 @01:44AM (#4675098)


    "Dear EMusic Subscriber,

    I'd like to offer a personal apology for some of our recent communication with you and other EMusic customers. Over the past several weeks, we have implemented some new tools in an effort to identify subscribers that are using EMusic in ways it was not intended. It's important for us to do this to ensure the long-term viability of EMusic -- so we can continue to offer our service to you and the rest of our 70,000 loyal subscribers.

    Many EMusic subscribers recently received a letter outlining unusual activity in their accounts. After personally reading through every email sent to us in response, it's clear to me that we need to rethink our approach. While we need to identify customers who are not using the service as intended, we do not want to do this at the expense of passionate EMusic users.

    I want to be as clear as possible about what we consider abusive activity and how we will manage this going forward. Although EMusic is an "unlimited" service, there have to be some restrictions on this policy.

    EMusic is similar to a buffet advertised as "all you can eat." For the restaurant to be successful, it has to have reasonable limitations that apply to people that stay too long, eat more than their fair share -- or waste food. The service is indeed unlimited for the vast majority of the restaurant's customers whose actions never draw attention. The restaurant reserves the right to deny service to any customer.

    EMusic was designed to be an interactive service for personal use and enjoyment. Our intent is to allow our subscribers unlimited access to an amount of music that they can reasonably use. We did not design the service for people who want to download music simply to collect it or to fill up their hard drives. This would be not be responsible for us as a business or provide incentive for our label partners to make their music available.

    Obviously, the definition of "reasonable" varies by user and many of the responses I have read are simply requesting some definition. Based on our current analysis of typical subscriber behavior, we believe that downloading more than 2,000 tracks in a 30-day period is not reasonable for personal use. Using a 12-track album as the average, this represents more than 165 albums and over 10,000 minutes of music. Less than 1% our subscribers ever approach these levels.

    If, for any reason, you do not find this explanation satisfactory, please use the following link: http://help.emusic.com/cu/index.cgi to cancel your

    account. We'll immediately end your subscription - even if you are still in your commitment period - and provide you a refund for the current month.

    Again, I apologize for any inconvenience or frustration we may have caused. I can assure you that our team is extremely passionate about continuing to provide you with the best MP3 subscription service possible.

    Best regards,

    Steve Grady

    General Manager, EMusic.com"



    http://www.dslreports.com/shownews/23396 [dslreports.com]
    • Shh, don't spread this too much, you'll ruin what I've been telling all my friends for ages: If you want to join emusic for free, just sign up and then download music for a few days straight, they'll cancel your subscription and refund your fees.
    • This has always seemed rather shady to me. If you advertise "unlimited" anything, that means no restrictions. What this letter says is that "we say unlimited, but we don't really mean it."


      They are correct that they need to have limitations -- but rather than acknowledging their misleading advertising, they're blaming the users who took them at their word.

    • by Snork Asaurus ( 595692 ) on Friday November 15, 2002 @03:11AM (#4675414) Journal
      As a result of the dot bomb and stock market downturn, a lot of unemployed MBA's have sought work elsewhere. Some have gone to ISP's, some to Cell Phone services companies, some to Cable Television service providers. All have one thing in common - they are implementing the standard b-school "Suck 'em In and Fleece Them" tiered service model:

      Dear Valued Customers,

      We are pleased to announce our new tiered service plans, specially designed to suit your specific needs. Now there is a plan for everyone! You may choose from:

      $9.99 Unlimited - The basic unlimited. There are limits and they're pretty damned low. No one will ever want this ( we just put it here so that our ads can scream "$9.99 UNLIMITED ! ")

      $19.99 More Unlimited Plan - still limited. Just not as limited as the Unlimited Plan.

      $29.99 Super Unlimited Plan - more unlimited than the More Unlimited Plan but less unlimited than the Ultra Unlimited Plan.

      $49.99 Ultra Unlimited Plan - this one is really, well, unlimited. OK, not really.

      $99.99 Mega Unlimited - Awesome! Really, really unlimited (on Tuesday nights only from 8:00 p.m. to midnight).

      $299.99 Ultra Supermega Supreme Unlimited. - Totally unlimited. Some restrictions apply. See contract for details. Offer void where people eat toast and in the state of Tennessee. Available only to new customers. Who live in Pittsburgh. On 4th Avenue. In a red house. With blue trim.

      $122,999,999.99 The Totally Ultra Supermega Supreme Buy the Damned Company Unlimited Plan. The most unlimited of all the unlimited plans. You can truly use all you want! Almost.

      Note: All plans are subject to cancellation if we feel like it.

    • Honestly, while I dislike advertising "unlimited" anything that you don't really want people to make use of, who the hell has time to download let alone listen to over 10000 minutes of music (~180 hours) per month? I mean, that would require listening to over 8 hours of music every business day of the month, with NO repeats. And you have to select and download all that music too. Jesus Christ. Get a life people.


      So it's reasonable to assume that people who are downloading over 180 hours of music a month are probably sharing their accounts, or something. Or just abusing the service. Downloading more music than a single person can conceivably listen to in a month is abusive. But anyway, why don't they just say "Download all the music you want, up to 10000 minutes of music a month!" instead of saying "unlimited". There will always be some who leach and seek to abuse the system - but no need to be dishonest, just state the limitations and expectations up front.

  • by GimmeFuel ( 589906 ) on Friday November 15, 2002 @01:45AM (#4675106) Homepage
    Ever time I hear this, I wonder why the record labels are bothering. It's not that tough of a decision for consumers. You can have digitally-rights managed, proprietary format songs that you pay for, or songs that you can burn to a CD or put on a portable player for free. And before I get flamed, yes, I am in favor of the artists getting compensation. But the record industry has a rather bad track record when it comes to giving artists a fair share of the profits. What's to assure me they won't just do the same with this new form of media? Give me a system that doesn't restrict my fair use, isn't overpriced and gives more than a 2% share to the artist, then I'll look at it.
  • by ThogScully ( 589935 ) <neilsd@neilschelly.com> on Friday November 15, 2002 @01:45AM (#4675107) Homepage
    Here's another article [siliconvalley.com] also about EMI's plans for digital music online. The quote that I like is:

    The product and the category we're delivering is the one they're looking for.

    I swear these guys must read /.
    -N
  • Wishlist: (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Longinus ( 601448 ) on Friday November 15, 2002 @01:49AM (#4675125) Homepage
    1) Ogg Vorbis! Wishful thinking, I know, but perhaps the labels should jump on this band wagon before the patent holders come knocking when downloadable music becomes the new record industry business model. Not do metion the superior quality at lower bitrates....

    2) If the selection is limited to only MP3s, I would want to have the option of downloading files at bitrates higher than simply 128kbs like Emusic currently only offers. Ideally I would have the option of getting any bitrate I want between 128kbs and 320kbs.

    3) Clearly defined download limits. Recently an Emusic user was banned for downloading 200 albums in 3 days as an "unlimited" subscriber. No hard cap was set in the TOS agreement, and if I were hypothetically using a service like this, I would want to be very clear on just how "unlimited" my downloading abilities were.

    4) Most importantly, I want to be able to formatshift, burn, mix, freely trade, and put the music files on any device I wish. I will never use a service that imposed DRM restrictions on my fair use rights, due to both principle and practicality.

    • Re:Wishlist: (Score:5, Insightful)

      by bsartist ( 550317 ) on Friday November 15, 2002 @02:08AM (#4675207) Homepage
      Most importantly, I want to be able to formatshift, burn, mix, freely trade, and put the music files on any device I wish. I will never use a service that imposed DRM restrictions on my fair use rights

      Please, if what you really want is to download music for free, just say so. Trying to claim that your "free trading" is fair use just dilutes the message of those who are defending things that are fair use, such as format shifting and such.
      • Re:Wishlist: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Longinus ( 601448 )
        Regardless of one's opinion on the legality of sharing as it relates to fair use, violating our fair use rights (the ability to time shift, format shit, make backup copies, record copyrigted material, etc, etc) in order to prevent us from possibly pirating intellectual property shouldn't be tolerated. If that's the case we're being punished for crimes we may or may not commit, and our fair use rights are trampled because in order to stop piracy, DRM would lock down media and devices and prevent us from doing perfectly legal things with what we buy.
      • Wait a minute here. If you own a book on C programming, and he owns a book on Pascal, you are free to trade your books with each other. It is possible but illegal to scan the book to disk before the trade. Why should music be any different?
      • Re:Wishlist: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by be-fan ( 61476 )
        Actually, downloading music for free has nothing to do with it. DRM just plain sucks. I bought a Sony NetMD player a while ago. Great little device. I personally think MiniDisc rules. But it's got DRM crap built in, and is thus nearly impossible to reverse engineer the protocol. As a result, I can only use it in Windows. My $150 player is now just a piece of plastic. Am I ever going to buy another audio player from Sony again? Not likely.
  • Ha? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by redshift-systems ( 622407 ) on Friday November 15, 2002 @01:50AM (#4675126)
    Well, pardon my ignorance, but exactly HOW do you prevent an MP3 from being downloaded to and listened by a player? Does this involve some specially encoded MP3 file? If so, do they really expect something like this to not be cracked within, say, one day?
  • I could care less (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward
    Music industry? You know what that is right? It's a middle man which we don't need. A lot of people missed the point about artists being paid just pennies per CD. But ever wonder why they drive a $100k car or have 5 houses each running $5+ million? Concerts obviously. I'm not a big fan of alternative music and would rather listen to Oakenofold, Tiesto, etc. When those guys came to america did I see them? Heck yea. I went to every club in my area they were playing at. So, what does the music industry really need?

    It needs music to be free. Bold statement for such a short rant, but yes that's exactly what needs to happen. One or two HUGE sites like MP3.com that host in the range of 50% of the album for free and the remainder could cost a buck to offset bandwith fees. It would have charts with top 100 in each genre of music.

    Well what about small bands that would need a fanbase before people would attend their events? How about every band selling DVDs of their concerts? If you like a band and can't find it in your area you just purchase the DVD of the 4hour concert on that huge music site. And thus there is your solution.

    No record companies. Bands get CDs printed which you can order if you would like a product that will last a heck of a long time. The bands all of their revenue through concerts, events, advertisements and the sale of DVDs. And... all their music is freely tradeable over the net. ;)

    So, back to the point of this post. Will p2p work? No. Not unless MS has its way and imbeds a method to watch our every move and control ALL content on your PC will p2p ever work. Most people are good natured but when they have an opportunity to steal something and a 99.999% probably that they will not get caught, they will steal it in most instances.

    Long story short. This wont work. The record industry has to realize just like the oil companies that their domination and even existance in the world is limited from hereonout.

    Mr. Coward
  • by Eric_Cartman_South_P ( 594330 ) on Friday November 15, 2002 @01:52AM (#4675137)
    ...if you've read some of my previous drooling dribble of delights! Here goes, full flame throttles on, sarcastic witt with a touch of intelagince and speling turned off:

    Tina Turner

    Are they fscking serious? How about Ms. R0$3n comes over my house, makes me a sandwich, _______ me and then I give her $19.99? Sound good?

  • Ogg (Score:5, Insightful)

    by EggplantMan ( 549708 ) on Friday November 15, 2002 @01:52AM (#4675139) Homepage
    ...'the formats they are demanding' (ogg?)
    I am a big proponent of the free (as in beer) codec ogg vorbis but seriously now, aside from in your bizarre fantasy world nobody is 'demanding' it in any way. As long as people can get free MP3 decoders, they seriously couldn't give a shit. That's the way people are, and no amount of doe-eyed optimism will change it. Really EMI sees no need to release anything in ogg, and besides that, with ogg being free (as in beer) you can get free encoders for it. Like it or not, with these sort of tools available for free, ogg is haven for audio pirates and EMI will not have any of it.
  • "users are demanding (ogg?)"

    The chance that ogg will ever be seriously adapted is about zero.

    • The argument for OGG is that some MP3 patent/process is owned by somebody.
    • In this way, the ogg campaign is similar to the days of 'burn all .gifs.'
    • Anti-gif campaigning went, essentially nowhere. Basically, Compuserve didn't go after anybody of import and PNG continues to be a marginally used format.
    • PNG is marginally used, despite being superior to .GIF, technically. The thing is, OGG is INFERIOR to even MP3, and certainly to WMA, etc, at least according to the OGG FAQ.
    • a path away from GIF entrenchment was relatively easy to do--just give everybody a new browser that supports both. The problem is that it's much harder to consider this for audio files considering how many mp3 (hardware) players are already in the field--it may not be technically ideal, but Mp3 is here to stay unless there is a compelling reason to switch.
    • Compelling reasons include:
      1. technical superiority (WMA has this, but even it can barely make a dent in mp3's market hold)
      2. mandates from hardware companies / ip holders - ie something that better considers DRM.
    I can see no compelling reason why OGG will ever gain any significant market share.
    • Re:Ogg.. no chance. (Score:5, Informative)

      by EvilBuu ( 145749 ) <EvilBuu@[ ]an.net ['yif' in gap]> on Friday November 15, 2002 @02:09AM (#4675215) Homepage
      Not entirely flamebait, but Ogg is inferior to MP3? What FAQ are you reading? According to this FAQ [vorbis.com] Ogg is "better" than MP3, and several blind tests would seem to confirm it.

      Unless you're not talking about quality-by-bitrate, in which case the only argument for MP3s superiority is that it is widespread (devices, decoders, etc). If that's all it takes to qualify for superiority then let's just support Microsoft, McDonalds and Dodge Neons (those things suck ass) all the way!
    • The market often takes wild shifts, all due to a lawsuit, or some other lawyer induced money exchanging frenzy. If enough people are scared into using "truly" free software, and not the "stolen free" kind, then OS formats will catch on with more than just the geek crowd.

      Don't be a nerd and steal, when you can be a geek and use Open Source.
    • Re:Ogg.. no chance. (Score:2, Informative)

      by gnoshi ( 314933 )
      1-3: somewhat true
      4: Don't know when you read the OGG faq, because it certainly doesn't say that these days. Furthermore, I have seen no evidence to indicate that ogg is worse than wma (except in the case of some classical music at low bitrates), or any evidence it is worse than any mp3, ever.
      5. hardware support is coming, according to (some) manufacturers.

      As for compelling reasons, there are a few ogg vorbis may succeed:
      1. Technical superiority*
      2. Support already coming from hardware manufacturers, which will hopefully become default encoding parameters, which will hopefully lead to mp3 getting less use etc etc.
      3. Zealots like me ranting about the greatness of the Ogg Vorbis to all and sundry, convincing them, and having them do the same (believe me, it actually does work)

      yes, I am a zealot on this front. sorry.

      gnoshi

      *according blind tests at low bitrates have established this - conducted by ff123 who may be found on www.hydrogenaudio.org boards (hope you don't mind the mention)
      Also established at higher (but not exceptionally high) bitrates by another serious listening test, but I honestly can't recall who the tester was. A tech magazine, German I believe.
      Above 160/192 Kbps, Musepack is king, up until lossless.
    • Re:Ogg.. no chance. (Score:3, Informative)

      by Chris Johnson ( 580 )
      Are you kidding? What are your credentials, please, for claiming that ogg is inferior to mp3?

      I'm a sound engineer, I _code_ audio DSP and wordlength reduction, I _analyse_ various mp3 codecs in novel ways and I have studied [airwindows.com] Ogg Vorbis and concluded that it offers the best of all mp3 encoder approaches, all at once. It has all the transient liveliness of Fraunhofer and all the tonal purity of Blade, and I've no doubt it's been improved still further since I looked.

      I don't know who you are, but you're certainly no sound engineer (or audio DSP coder), and I... strongly disagree with your claim.

  • by mao che minh ( 611166 ) on Friday November 15, 2002 @01:54AM (#4675151) Journal
    Is this related? Musicmatch.com [musicmatch.com] offers subscription services for BMG, EMI, Universal, and Warner Brothers. This was noted on BMG's site in their news section yesterday.
  • format... (Score:5, Funny)

    by jmv ( 93421 ) on Friday November 15, 2002 @01:55AM (#4675156) Homepage
    in 'the formats they are demanding'

    "After 1 year of research we found out that users love DRM and want nothing but DRM, so that's what we'll offer"
  • EMI Recorded Music - the world's largest independent record company - today announced its enhanced digital download distribution program for the U.S. in which the company will give consumers - through leading distributors - the ability to download tracks permanently, the technical capability to burn a limited number of personal copies and the flexibility to import recordings to portable devices.

    "This is the next step in our plan to give consumers our music in the formats they are demanding today, and to give our distributors maximum flexibility to offer a wider range of options and a deep selection of music," said David Munns, Chairman and CEO of EMI Recorded Music North America.

    MP3 is the format that is in most demand (actually used) today... keeping this in mind, the top quote doesn't rhyme with the bottom one. Of what I know, MP3 doesn't have a limit for how many copies you can make. We can assume this being yet another blow the whistle to get some attention by EMI. It seems EMI is going to use Microsoft's format.
  • by Tuffnut ( 618438 ) on Friday November 15, 2002 @01:58AM (#4675165)
    No one wants buy god damn mp3s online. They want something they can hold in their hands! And also, how many freakin' people have credit cards? I'm talking about the whole lot of kids and teenagers who are the main target market for a lot of music these days.

    Stop with these horseshit schemes and drop the prices of fucking CDs already. They should slice the price of CDs in half, and then I'd start buying them again. Those greedy bastard musicians can then realize what it means to work for their money.
    • I think your anger is misplaced. Granted, CDs are too expensive. How much of that has to do with the artist?

      Sure M. Carey and JLo pull down the big $$$ and Michael-Circus-Freak-Jackson just complained about Sony ripping him off (ha, who wants to see old pointy nose grab his balls again, raise your hands), but how many don't get dough at all? Lots. Where does the money go? Into the hands of record execs.

      Methinks you should kill the messenger service, not the messenger.

  • So worried are the record labels that some, including EMI and Warner, have even talked about suing individual file-sharers for illegally downloading songs. This would be a last resort, for it would alienate potential customers of legitimate services.

    Hmmm... not sure I understand this point. How would it alienate potential customers?
    I suspect the real reason why the record labels haven't gone after individuals is because it would be prohibitively expensive.
    I wonder why, though, they just don't go after a few random individuals to set a precedent... or have they?
  • I'll be ready to sign up for this. Despite their underhanded and definitely unethical practices in trying to stick a wrench in the cogs of peer to peer networks(a laughably foolish concept at best, corporate cyber-terrorism at worst(Ooh! The hippy learned how to use kneejerk phrases in his posts! Washington beware!)), I'd be willing to support the recording industry's first real foray into the digital medium. Naturally(as this is slashdot), I didn't bother reading the article, but I'm sure most people(read:people with money, not whiners without money) would be happy to pay a $50/month charge(about the cost of cable where I live) to use this service at unlimited downloads per month.

    It's really nice to see that the recording industry might finally be realizing that there are reasons beyond economic ones for consumers to want an internet based service, such as the convenience of simply typing in a long-forgotten song which wouldn't be available in stores. The only things which might make this even better would be if A)all labels were doing this, creating a library for the rental, and B)enough people stopped using P2P to convince the RIAA to stop their war against it. P2P has applications beyond sharing music -- it can also be used to get a copy of something like Mandrake 9, which was impossible to download through conventional means for weeks after it came out (and with good reason -- it rocks! :) ), or it can be used as a cheap platform for shareware developers to launch their product. It's just a matter of putting the technology to good use.
  • by lingqi ( 577227 ) on Friday November 15, 2002 @02:12AM (#4675225) Journal
    lies, damn lies, and statistics?

    over 90% of CDs sold in China is pirated

    well NO SHIT considering the average chinese citizen has a YEARLY purchasing power of 3,000 US dollars. that's 250 dollars per month, and you think people will shell out 15 dollars for a CD?

    Of course, similar to the US (90% of the money is controled by 10% of people), chinese economic ladder is skewed too -- so actually the average family subsides on 100-150 dollars per month usually.

    hence, all the "oh my god 4.6 billion dollars lost sale" is so bullshit that you can't even begin.

    interesting side note: since there are so many people there, even though the average purchasing power is only 3000 (actually comparable to many nations (for example, in africa) that's starving), it still makes china the second largest economic power in the world.

    but don't ever, EVER think people there can afford "legit" music, software, and all the crap we buy while taking the disposible income for granted.

  • by EzInKy ( 115248 ) on Friday November 15, 2002 @02:16AM (#4675239)
    If the historical model of the consumer paying for art once and being able to enjoy it for the rest of his life, then it will work. This is the way books, paintings, and music have been sold to consumers for centuries, and in the last few decades movies have joined the list as well.

    But if they decide to try to limit the usage term after purchase, which I believe is the real goal of DRM and other copy protection systems, then it will fail because consumers will feel cheated by the industry.
  • by Sean Clifford ( 322444 ) on Friday November 15, 2002 @02:19AM (#4675253) Journal
    People have soundtracks: mp3 players, mix CDs, mix cassette tapes. We hire DJs to keep the music pumping at our parties. Folks make requests - of live performers, of radio spindoctors. Each person has different tastes and has a music mix for each occassion, even if it's just the music in their heads.


    My point is that each person wants to control how they listen and what they hear. It's about expressing yourself through the music you play, even if it's just playing a CD track or listening to an mp3 (or ogg). You don't get more anti-freedom (totalitarian) than telling me what I must or cannot read/hear/watch/say or when I do so. Call me a "liberal" (gasp) "anti-capitalist" (the horror) consumer but when I buy books/movies/music/cableTV/satTV then I think that I have a right to read/watch/listen/touch it when, where, and how I want to.


    Making it more difficult for me to enjoy new movies/music/books/whatever how and where I want to won't entice me to buy more. If a music CD/movie won't play on my computer - where I spend 80% of my waking time - or in my car (where I spend 15+ hours a week) or on my mp3 player at the gym (where I spend <.00000001% of my time) then I just won't bother with it. And neither will a zillion other people. It's not worth the trouble.


    And that's the problem.

    ::sigh::/shrug


    I'm going back to coding and watching V: The Original Miniseries [imdb.com] on DVD.

  • no, that should read 'the formats they are demanding' (wma-drm?)
  • Please explain (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Dexter77 ( 442723 ) on Friday November 15, 2002 @02:22AM (#4675270)
    From the article:
    "Counterfeiting is also growing in size and sophistication. Another report published this week by Informa Media reckons pirated music sales rose in value by 2.4% in 2001 to a worldwide total of $4.3 billion. Taiwan remains the biggest culprit: it has the capacity to press 8 billion CDs a year but has a legitimate demand for only 200m, says the report. Around 90% of CDs sold in China each year are pirated. But the problem is growing in western countries too. The heads of European record companies, meeting recently in Rome, estimated that 27% of music sold in Italy is now pirated; in southern Italy, the proportion is nearer half."

    This is something I don't understand. If the problem really is music sharing in the Internet, then how come counterfeiters are gaining more market? I would understand this if there was a recession and people didn't have money to buy CDs, but.. hey wait a minute, there is a recession. Now I'm on to something. Since people don't have the money and they still need their favorite music, do they have any other choice?

    Atleast where I live the counterfeited CD costs about 5-8 euros. Blank CD-R costs 40 cents. If people just could download those albums for 5euros maybe they didn't buy pirated versions?

    (Maybe this is my childish logic. We all know that everyone using the Internet is an evil pirate who steals from the poor artists and wants to destroy the world economics.)
  • by tevman ( 613659 )
    I believe that, if the artists were smart at all, that they would bypass the record company conglomerate altogether, if there was a p2p service that offered music and had contracts with the artists directly, that would be the ultimate record label, imagine how good music would become and how obselete going to the record store would become if you were supporting the artists you liked by downloading thier music. It wouldnt need to be a big fee, just 2 or 3 cents a song, and if a song is popular, that offers up a sizable check to the artist. I wish i had the know-how and the time to set up a p2p network liek that someday, but alas, even though its a good idea... you still have to deal with those record company a-holes, but its a good idea for the future-- new artists that want an alternative to someone else owning thier music.
    • While that kind of system would be great for artists that are already well known, what about new artists trying to get their break? With no record label to support the studio efforts and touring, let alone getting the music to radio stations from coast to coast and MTV, the music industry would suffer because it would be even harder for new artists to break through.
  • by fermion ( 181285 ) on Friday November 15, 2002 @02:30AM (#4675294) Homepage Journal
    What I find most hopeful is that in the press release they highlight the classic music of the label. You know, the stuff that people already have on vinyl, tape, and CD. EMI is evidently giving us the opportunity to legally buy this music once again as MP3s, presumably to save us the hassle of converting the CDs ourselves.

    I am really excited to have the opportunity to once again pay for the same songs from such wonderful people as
    Billy Idol, Blondie, David Bowie, Coldplay, Joe Cocker, DC Talk, Duran Duran, Everclear, Fatboy Slim, Pink Floyd, Norah Jones, Kottonmouth Kings, Dave Koz, Lenny Kravitz, Megadeth, Kylie Minogue, Anne Murray, Tina Turner, Thalia, Keith Urban, The Vines, Cassandra Wilson and The Beach Boys
    many for the third or fourth time. It is clear that the what the record labels consider piracy is the consumer not paying full price for a song on each new media. It is not enough the we pay for the CD, we have to pay for the MP3 as well, probably on each device with which we wish to play.

    It is also clear from the list that EMI believes none of us have any interest in artists such as Shaggy, AALIYAH, Janet Jackson, Snoop Dogg, Meridith Brooks, Garth Brooks, or any other artists that has had a major new album in the last two years. I certainly don't want to be one of those people that damn them if they do or if they don't, but the press release gives me little hope that this is any more than a way to push old material.

    • But I've got all their releases on stone tablet, wax cylnder, magetized wire, reel to reel, vinyl, 8-track, cassette, digital cassette, DAT, minidisk, CD, DVD, SACD, and Holographic Cube already!

      Now I'll have to download them too?! Ah, hell...

  • Use the resources we already have [slashdot.org]. We've got a book section, why not a music section? Besides, there's only four /.ers that know how to read, anyhow.
  • Make it accessible (Score:5, Informative)

    by be-fan ( 61476 ) on Friday November 15, 2002 @02:44AM (#4675339)
    I've said this before a couple of times, but it's particularly relevent. Thsese services need to make their content accessible. I recently *bought* a subscription to Rhapsody, which is currently the biggest online music site (aside from maybe eMusic, but Rhapsody carries big-5 stuff). I was perfectly happy to shell out $10 or $20 bucks a month (note, I buy about 1 CD a year, so this is 12x the amount they usually get for me). I considered it a pretty fair deal. Then, I found out that you could only use it with Internet Explorer, and only on Windows. Windows is my dedicated CounterStrike OS. I've got like 100MB free once XP and HalfLife is installed. Screw them if they think I'd boot back into Windows just to use their service. For a streaming media website, this makes no sense at all. So in the end, I decided that Shoutcast was good enough for me, and cancled my subscription. While the number of Linux users out there is comparatively small, the number of MacOS users isn't. And I'd tend to bet that the MacOS-types are significantly more likely than the average Windows user to subscribe to something like this. Also, a lot of desktop Linux users are on the younger side, and they'd also be more likely to buy into this. All told, there is probably a pretty nice chunk of change that they're losing from being uni-platform. Especially since it takes *less* development effort to just use the browser and native media systems thatn to roll your own!
  • Living Memory? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by outlier ( 64928 ) on Friday November 15, 2002 @02:54AM (#4675368)
    From the article: After a 5% decline in the sales of recorded music in 2001, the first fall in living memory,.

    That statement would be correct if nobody could remember way back to 1997. In those heady days of the Clinton presidency and the dot com boom, the folks at the RIAA reported a 6.5% decrease in annual sales [riaa.org]. Back then they didn't have the p2p bogeyman to blame so they laid the blame on retailers streamlining their inventories.

    On the whole 'who to blame' angle, I'm amazed that nobody is talking about the role of Clearchannel's radio monopoly on decreased music sales. Before one company dictated that there would be only a handful of radio formats across most major cities, stations were more likely to expand their playlists to include local acts, independent musicians, and songs that local programming personnel liked. Now, playlists are sent down from the home office, and there is more homogeneity among playlists. What does that mean? Fewer new songs get any real airplay, thus giving the listeners of Big Radio fewer unique albums to consider buying...

    Back to EMI: The description of their system has so many vague statements that I seriously doubt that this will take off (and we know that EMI never tries to mislead listeners [slashdot.org]). What listeners want is ease and freedom.

    Here's what needs to happen for online music to be profitable for the labels:

    1. Record companies have to realize that consumers really don't care who produces or distributes an album. When I go to a record store to by an album, I don't have to know whether it's a BMG or Sony album, I just go to the store and buy it. With these disperate online music services, each with their own catalogs, consumers are supposed to care about these things.

    2. Give me the freedom to listen to my music how I want and when I want. Too many of these services offer limited ability to burn CDs or copy to mp3 players. Stop that. I bought the damn music, let me listen to it the way I want. Stop treating your customers like crooks.

    It's not that hard. Record executives have a hard time realizing that the music industry is about the artists. Yes, Mr. Exec I'm sure you're a really neat guy, and I know you spend a lot of time doing important things like Bribing radio stations to play your music [salon.com] and engaging in $480,000,000 in price fixing [usatoday.com], and I can only imagine how difficult it is to threaten academic researchers [princeton.edu]. But seriously, you may be getting just a teansy bit greedy and irrational.

    Man, I need some sleep...
  • Will this really work? It looks good on paper, sure, but what about people who choose to share their pay-accounts with other people? What if this only adds to the number of high quality mp3s that are available on existing -- and free -- p2p networks? Hell, even I have second thoughts of paying to burn lossy audio to media that I have to buy myself.

    I hope this does work out for the best, but EMI has to be extremely competetive in order to get people to pay for something that they can already get for free. There better be fast, effecient downloads, lyrics, album covers, videos, band history, download history, chat, reasonable pricing, the whole nine hundred yards.

    What everyone on the planet needs is a nice fat bitch of a pipe so that we can download uncompressed, high quality audio to burn to our cds.

    Oh, and it better work on linux.

  • by neiljt ( 238527 ) on Friday November 15, 2002 @03:03AM (#4675390)
    Users of less-than-optimal quality compressed formats such as MP3 & Ogg use them because they are convenient to download (& share), and because they are manageable in terms of storage needs -- especially for those who like to keep them online. Such formats have taken over from the C90 audio cassette of my school days in that they provide the best medium for music-swapping. However they still do not provide the best possible digital listening experience, and I prefer to own my favourite music on CD.

    So here's a radical idea that no-one seems to have taken seriously to date, and it's one which would suit all parties: Artists, Recording industry, Publishers/Distributors and Consumers.

    The advantages of owning music on CD are: Quality, Variety, and Packaging. The music is in uncompressed format, the track collection may include numbers previously unheard (leading to new discoveries), and the packaging hopefully provides reading and pictorial material on the artist(s).

    Now if publishers produced a package as a downloadable CD-quality image, incorporating uncompressed music and a multimedia "sleeve" (background, photos, soundbytes, interviews, videos, printable CD cover, etc.), such that I could burn this to CD, I for one could be persuaded to part with $$ for this. OK, it might take me 6 days to d/l until I get DSL, but the time has come to consider this.

    I understand CD fabs are expensive, so the industry could pass on some of the savings they make [howls of ironic laughter from the crowd], with the standard CD price redefined at around say $5. Who would balk at that? The "single" or EP format will continue to appeal, and should also be offered, at lower cost. Recordable DVD offers possibilities for larger collections, movies and so forth (though how the network may creak under the load is for another discussion).

    No-one is pretending that the swapping will not continue, but collectors are prepared to pay a small premium for extra quality if the price is right.
    • /I understand CD fabs are expensive,/

      When you amortize the cost of a CD fab over the entire production run, it's small change. Most of what you pay in a CD goes to inflated marketing, legal fees, and the associated beauracracy of a major music publishing company.

      So getting rid of the CD fab cost won't make a lick of difference.

  • This is doomed (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Groo Wanderer ( 180806 ) <charlie@semiaccura t e . c om> on Friday November 15, 2002 @03:04AM (#4675392) Homepage
    Formatting problems aside, this will fail for 2 reasons, both are money. The first is obvious, if you do a search of the press release, the word 'price' is never mentioned. You would think they would have something like 'each track can be downloaded for a reasonable price'. Nope. Wanna bet it will be $2.49 a song, restricted also, because people 'demand' secure formats because they don't want to be 'ripped off'. Sure, this will fly. That is the short term deathblow.

    The longer one is more insidious. Say you have the songs you purchased on your hard drive, and one day, you turn your machine on and hear a grinding noise followed by clicks. Disk failure. You then call up the nice people who sold you the music and ask for new copies, because your legally purchased music is gone, and you are well within your rights to request another copy. Remember, they give you the honor of using a license, not owning the track. If your HD dies, you still have the rights to the license. So, you ask the nice person on the phone if you can have free downloads of the entire 98Sync degrees to men collection that you just spent $800 on. Then you wait. You can just barely hear the riotous laughter through the phone that has dropeed to the floor on the other end. Then they tell you to fuck off. Luckily, in the fine print that they changed since you agreed to it, legally of course, they want the money they spent on senators put to good use, says 'we can tell you to fuck off at any time for any reason'. So you fuck off. And then you never patronise them, or any other similar service again. This will really end the industry, and they are way way to greedy to do anything else.

    Lastly, a personal note. The music industry, chiefly in the guise of the RIAA has done more in the last year or two to erode our civil rights than anything else that I can think of. They killed several good, legal services, and they are not stopping. They are forcing changes to the technology that I use and love to make them more money. They have no qualms about buying power and abusing it on a whim. If you doubt it, read the legislation that they are trying to get passed (there is to much of it to link here, start at www.theregister.co.uk with a search for RIAA). By using services like this, you are only enriching the very people who are targeting you and the things you love. Don't give them more money, it will only hurt you in the long run. When they went after napster, I said that I would not buy a CD until it played out, and if napster won, I would go back to buying CDs. If they lost, I would never buy a CD again. I have not bought a CD since. My 300+ collection collects dust. I have stopped consuming music. NPR is better radio anyway. Don't buy the 'new, friendlier' record company BS, they are sharks, and you are bleeding.

    -Charlie
  • by hazzzard ( 530181 ) on Friday November 15, 2002 @03:12AM (#4675421)

    Dear record company CEOs!

    I am proposing the following business model for your company:
    I pay you the price that I am paying you now (1-3 CDs a year): about 5 bucks a month. For that price (a monthly flatrate), I want all the records that you have in your archives.
    Please provide for easy download via FTP. I prefer to use wget --mirror. Bandwith doesn't matter. Your business will then depend on new, interesting releases. I would also be willing to make an agreement with you in which access to earlier records will increase over time. For example: After 1 year of membership, I will be able to retrieve all the stuff in the last two years, after 2 years four years and so on.

    As long as you deliver content that is
    • e.g. not accessible for me (e.g. some proprietary player as Liquid audio in the EMI example)
    • e.g. not reusable (DRM shit) or
    • not playable on any device that I own (CD with copy protection)
    • overpriced
    SCREW YOU!
  • by alizard ( 107678 ) <alizardNO@SPAMecis.com> on Friday November 15, 2002 @04:32AM (#4675606) Homepage
    First, the music industry's deliberate confusion between "product" (CD audio track) and "promotional item" (MP3) seems to have worked here as well.

    Why are people in general unwilling to pay for MP3 quality music?

    People are used to getting access FREE OF CHARGE to any of dozens of available unrestricted mid-fi audio streams which are completely unrestricted, can be recorded with anything, can be uploaded to MP3 players or anything else. People have been using this to make compilation tapes, make tapes for friends, and "try before buying" since long before many of you were born.

    Yes, this is for real, and is everyday reality not only for propellor-heads, but for the average American.

    It's called FM radio. Is the quality really all that different from 128Kbps MP3 quality?

    MP3 distribution is no more a threat to industry profits than FM radio is. Is there any reason why FM radio is so important a promotional tool for music that the industry will pay hundreds of thousands of dollars to get a single song played on the radio where EVIL pirates could record it and try to get people who put the same song at a similar quality level on Internet Radio shut down or jailed?

    The difference is that the record industry can control FM radio via payola and no obvious way to do the same thing via the Internet except through sites controlled by the industry. Joe Average can submit a song to an Internet Radio station for free, and if the owner likes it, he'll play it. Universal can do the same thing for the same price. The record labels are unhappy about the Joe Average part. They would have no problems with it if the Internet Radio stations played only the content they were told to play.

    What the industry likes least is a mix of familiar label tunes with Joe Average's music, because the familiar label tunes tell the listener what genre of music can really be expected at a particular station... and what kinds of unfamiliar songs might be found.

    The only new music the RIAA labels want us to hear is their own.

    So through their legal sockpuppets in Congress and the CARP panel, they did their best to shut down the potential competition.

    Why should there be legal harassment just because people choose to listen to it via Internet instead of via Clear Channel or companies choose to deliver it?

    Does anybody actually believe that a 128K MP3 is the "perfect digital copy" that Hilary Rosen and her apologists have been whining about for years? If you do, don't waste our time by responding. First, get your hearing checked by an audiologist. If there's no problem, go to your wall, take that precious MCSE you just got after a month of hard work, burn it, go back to school for a few years and don't post about technology and public policy until you've learned something about both.

    I don't find the idea of buying the real product, uncompressed CD audio tracks a-la carte or as albums for 50 cents to $1 per track online intrinsically objectionable in the least. The ability to get the single or two decent songs on a typical album without the filler would be worth it to me. Too bad they can't deliver it, and the fact that they can't really isn't their fault.

    50 megabytes of download per track are a bit much for a dialup to handle, and the average Internet user is going to be using dialup for quite some time into the future as I do.

    So why do I think they're hoping for failure? Because the spectacular failure of Yet Another Venue For Selling Music Industry Promotional Items in place of music to the public gives them another excuse to whine to Congress about how EVIL INTERNET USERS are determined to STEAL music from them WITHOUT PAYING.

    The RIAA labels just want to get a legal strangehold on the development of any technology which has the remotest possibility of opening up avenues of competition to outsiders.

  • by Captain_Chaos ( 103843 ) on Friday November 15, 2002 @06:09AM (#4675808)
    From the press release:

    ...the technical capability to burn a limited number of personal copies and the flexibility to import recordings to portable devices...

    An MP3 file is not encrypted and hasn't got any kind of copy control mechanism built-in, nor is it possible to add something like that to the format since it's just an MPEG audio stream with no header or stream descriptors or anything.

    That means that there's no way EMI could prevent you from burning, uploading to any portable player or copying the tracks you download from them.

    Ergo, the format is probaly going to be WMA, which does have that kind of controls built-in. But that means that it's going to be more of the same:

    • You still won't be able to burn the tracks when and where you want to.
    • You won't be able to upload them to any portable device that doesn't support secure WMA (such as my empeg, a car MP3 player).
    • You'll probably have to use Microsoft Internet Explorer and/or Microsoft Windows Media Player to download and play the tracks.
    • You won't be able to play the tracks under any other OS such as Linux.
    • You'll have to be online to play the tracks at least sometimes, so your license can be renewed. Internet access costs money where I live.
    • Etc...

    In other words, the same old fair-use restricting crap that we're used to from the industry. There's nothing revolutionary or new about this...

  • Ease of Use (Score:3, Insightful)

    by raiyu ( 573147 ) <raiyu@rai[ ]com ['yu.' in gap]> on Friday November 15, 2002 @06:28AM (#4675846) Homepage
    Instead of spending so much energy focusing on DRM, which everyone realizes is useless, they should instead focus on a service and ease of use.

    DRM wont work unless each piece of hardware used to play music is tagged and then submitted to their service so that the music you download can be authorized to play on those hardware. Not to mention, that all DRM will eventually, if not the day of its release, be cracked anyway. Instead of limiting consumers (temporarily) the music industry should focus on making music downloads quick and easy. Give us our choice of bit rates, easy menus for selection, the ability to mix and match songs from various albums and artists, allow quick and easy payment, and by god not only will you turn a profit, but people will purchase more music. In addition they should be able to sell more music, since personally I buy a very varied range, and some rare and difficult to find CDs can be just as easily offered online for download as the latest Pop Top 40.

    I never goto the store to buy a music CD anymore, its just much easier online, but offer me a service online to download mp3s from and I would purchase much more, there is no charge for shipping, I can mix, and I can get them already in mp3 at high bit rates, which saves me the hassle. (98% of my listening to music is solely on PC). Thats just my take on it.
  • I can see it now (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Lumpy ( 12016 ) on Friday November 15, 2002 @07:22AM (#4675952) Homepage
    it will allow users to get music in 'the formats they are demanding'

    Funny, I didnt think everyone was demanding WMA

  • by Craig Maloney ( 1104 ) on Friday November 15, 2002 @08:03AM (#4676018) Homepage
    I'm pretty sure this whole idea is going to suck based on EMI's "me too" attitude regarding copy protected CDs.
    1. The digital media files will most likely have SDMI or some other Digital Rights Management enforced to the hilt. I wuldn't be surprised if the masses were clamoring for WMA files, according to EMI.

    2. Burning to a CD. I can't imagine any company so enthralled with releasing their catalog with copy protection is going to allow you as a consumer to record youur own CDs without first contacting them to see if it's OK. I'm thinking what Audible has (program contacts Audible to ensure you can copy this audio book to CD) is what they'd use. I can't imagine them letting consumers just burn digital audio without some catch.

    Just my .02
  • by BurtCrep ( 601313 ) on Friday November 15, 2002 @08:59AM (#4676168)
    When I think about it all, there is a great parallel that can be drawn from the VHS-to-DVD consumer move that is currently occurring. Bear with me, I'll get to the point shortly.

    So, what are the factors that made DVDs widely accepted and adopted? Yes, better picture and sound. Yes, a smaller, more convenient format. But to me, above all, it was better contents that made people switch to DVDs. You don't just buy or rent the movie, you have extra scenes, alternate endings, bloopers, interviews, etc. Hollywood could have put all of that on VHS as well but they didn't. They wanted us to switch to DVD and we have, based on contents. You just have to listen to any DVD movie advertisement to be convinced. The emphasis is on contents, not technical merits.

    Now, why can't it be the same for music? Technical merits of digital music are well known by now. When I start seeing music companies think outside the box and provide me with an enhanced listening experience, such as 5.1 surround, lyrics, clips, mind dazzling visual effects, special editions to name just a few that quickly jump to mind, and which is only available from their service, then I'll think it's worthwhile to subscribe to it and pay to download. Until then, I want nothing of the lazy, uncreative, retarded way of thinking displayed by dinosaur companies who are trying to sell me the same old crap.

    Face it guys, you dropped the ball. No amount of trying to sell me what is now free will ever change that. Sell me something else that I'll want to buy.

Money will say more in one moment than the most eloquent lover can in years.

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